Abstract
Marine sediment sequences with CH 4 hydrate are characterized by an atypical depth profile in dissolved Cl − squeezed from pore space: a shallow subsurface Cl − maximum overlies a lengthy and pronounced Cl − minimum. This pore water Cl − profile represents a combination of multiple processes including glacial–interglacial variations in ocean salinity, advection and diffusion of ions that are excluded during gas hydrate formation at depth, and release of fresh water from dissociation of hydrate during core recovery. In situ quantities of gas hydrate can be determined from a measured pore water Cl − profile provided the in situ pore water signature prior to core recovery can be separated. Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 997 was drilled into a large CH 4 hydrate reservoir on the Blake Ridge in the western Atlantic Ocean. Previously we have constructed a high-resolution pore water Cl − profile at this location; here we present a `coupled chloride-hydrate' numerical model to explain basic trends in the Cl − profile and to isolate in situ Cl − concentrations. The model is based on thermodynamic and ecological considerations, and uses established equations for describing chemical behavior in marine sediment–pore water systems. The model incorporates four key concepts: (1) most gas hydrate is formed immediately below the SO 4 2− reduction zone; (2) fluid, dissolved ions and gas advect upward through the sediment column; (3) CH 4 hydrate dissociates at the base of hydrate stability conditions; and (4) seawater salinity fluctuates during glacial–interglacial cycles of the late Pliocene and Quaternary. Rates of upward advection in the model are sufficient to account for measured Br − and I − concentrations as well as CH 4 oxidation at the base of the SO 4 2− reduction zone. In situ pore water Cl − inferred from the model is similar to that determined by limited direct sampling; in situ CH 4 hydrate amounts inferred from the model (an average of about 4% of porosity) are broadly consistent with those determined by direct gas sampling and indirect geophysical techniques. The model also predicts production of substantial quantities of free CH 4 gas bubbles (>2.5% of porosity) at a depth immediately below the lowest accumulation of CH 4 hydrate in the sediment column. Our explanation for the pore water Cl − profile at Site 997 is important because it provides a theoretical mechanism for understanding the distribution of interstitial water Cl −, gas hydrate, and free gas in a marine sediment column.
Published Version
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