Abstract

Abstract. Geochemical studies for gas hydrate, gas and organic matter collected from gas hydrate research wells drilled at the landward side of the eastern Nankai Trough, offshore Tokai, Japan, are reported. Organic matter in the 2355 m marine sediments drilled to Eocene is mainly composed of Type III kerogen with both marine and terrigenous organic input. The gas hydrate‐bearing shallow sediments are immature for hydrocarbon generation, whereas the sediments below 2100 mbsf are thermally mature. The origins of gases change from microbial to thermogenic at around 1500 mbsf.Carbon isotope compositions of CH4 and CO2, and hydrocarbon compositions consistently suggest that the CH4 in the gas hydrate‐bearing sediments is generated by microbial reduction of CO2. The δ13C depth‐profiles of CH4 and CO2 suggest that the microbial methanogenesis is less active in the Nankai Trough sediments compared with other gas hydrate‐bearing sediments where solid gas hydrate samples of microbial origin were recovered. Since in situ generative‐potential of microbial methane in the Nankai Trough sediments is interpreted to be low due to the low total organic carbon content (0.5 % on the average) in the gas hydrate‐bearing shallow sediments, upward migration of microbial methane and selective accumulation into permeable sands should be necessary for the high concentration of gas hydrate in discrete sand layers.

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