28 resultados para Liquefied natural gas--Law and legislation--South Carolina
Resumo:
Ocean Drilling Program Site 1119 is ideally located to intercept discharges of sediment from the mid-latitude glaciers of the New Zealand Southern Alps. The natural gamma ray signal from the site's sediment core contains a history of the South Island mountain ice cap since 3.9 million years ago (Ma). The younger record, to 0.37 Ma, resembles the climatic history of Antarctica as manifested by the Vostok ice core. Beyond, and back to the late Pliocene, the record may serve as a proxy for both mid-latitude and Antarctic polar plateau air temperature. The gamma ray signal, which is atmospheric, also resembles the ocean climate history represented by oxygen isotope time series.
Resumo:
I have evaluated shipboard data and preliminary interpretations related to organic geochemistry in light of additional shore-based analyses. Data on interstitial gas, the C/N ratio, and fluorescence indicate that organic matter was altered by sills and that these were all single intrusions except the upper sill complex at Site 481, which was a multiple emplacement. Site 477 had the highest in situ temperature, estimated from interstitial gas composition to be 225°C.
Resumo:
During the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 307 for the first time a cold-water coral carbonate mound was drilled down through its base into the underlying sediments. In the current study, sample material from within and below Challenger Mound, located in the Belgica carbonate mound province in the Porcupine Basin offshore Ireland, was investigated for its distribution of microbial communities and gas composition using biogeochemical and geochemical approaches to elucidate the question on the initiation of carbonate mounds. Past and living microbial populations are lower in the mound section compared to the underlying sediments or sediments of an upslope reference site. A reason for this might be a reduced substrate feedstock, reflected by low total organic carbon (TOC) contents, in the once coral dominated mound sequence. In contrast, in the reference site a lithostratigraphic sequence with comparatively high TOC contents shows higher abundances of both past and present microbial communities, indicating favourable living conditions from time of sedimentation until today. Composition and isotopic values of gases below the mound base seem to point to a mixed gas of biogenic and thermogenic origin with a higher proportion of biogenic gas. Oil-derived hydrocarbons were not detected at the mound site. This suggests that at least in the investigated part of the mound base the upward flow of fossil hydrocarbons, being one hypothesis for the initiation of the formation of carbonate mounds, seems to be only of minor significance.
Resumo:
A suite of gas samples obtained from gas pockets and sediments of the Nankai accretionary prism (Site 808) has been analyzed for their gas composition and carbon and hydrogen isotope ratios. Gases collected from gas pockets between 10 and 555 mbsf consist of CH4 and CO2. Stable carbon isotope ratios of these two components point to a bacterial formation of methane via CO2-reduction that is also supported by D/H ratios of methane. Methane desorbed from sediments by a vacuum/acid treatment is of bacterial and thermal origin. Mixing between these gas types is indicated by molecular composition and carbon isotope ratios. Diagenetic processes at low temperatures can explain ethane to pentane concentrations from 0 to 850 mbsf. Between 850 mbsf and the basaltic basement hydrocarbon occurrences are related to catagenetic processes at elevated temperatures. Thermal alteration of organic matter is reflected through different gas parameters. Propane carbon isotope values of a sample from the zone of the frontal thrust indicate that the gas likely migrated from sediments of a higher maturity into the immature sediments at 366 mbsf.
Resumo:
The sediment temperature distribution at mud volcanoes provides insights into their activity and into the occurrence of gas hydrates. If ambient pressure and temperature conditions are close to the limits of the gas hydrate stability field, the sediment temperature distribution not only limits the occurrence of gas hydrates, but is itself influenced by heat production and consumption related to the formation and dissociation of gas hydrates. Located in the Sorokin Trough in the northern Black Sea, the Dvurechenskii mud volcano (DMV) was in the focus of detailed investigations during the M72/2 and M73/3a cruises of the German R/V Meteor and the ROV Quest 4000 m in February and March 2007. A large number of in-situ sediment temperature measurements were conducted from the ROV and with a sensor-equipped gravity corer. Gas hydrates were sampled in pressurized cores using a dynamic autoclave piston corer (DAPC). The thermal structure of the DMV suggests a regime of fluid flow at rates decreasing from the summit towards the edges of the mud volcano, accompanied by intermittent mud expulsion at the summit. Modeled gas hydrate dissociation temperatures reveal that the gas hydrates at the DMV are very close to the stability limits. Changes in heat flow due to variable seepage rates probably do not result in changes in sediment temperature but are compensated by gas hydrate dissociation and formation.