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Methane sources in gas hydrate-bearing cold-seeps : evidence from radiocarbon and stable isotopes
Authors
Archer
Bernard
+53 more
Berner
Blaise
Buffett
C.S. Mitchell
Chanton
Chanton
Cicerone
Claypool
D.L. Knies
Dickens
E.A. Canuel
Galimov
Ginsburg
Grabowski
Grubbs
Hovland
Hunt
J.E. Bauer
J.W. Pohlman
Judd
K.S. Grabowski
Kessler
Kessler
Kvenvolden
Lelieveld
Levitus
M.J. Whiticar
McKay
Milkov
Milkov
Milkov
Milkov
Milkov
Okada
Paull
Pohlman
Pohlman
R.B. Coffin
Reagan
Reeburgh
Riedel
Sassen
Sellanes
Skilbeck
Sloan
Stuiver
Torres
Van Dover
Vogel
Wahlen
Whiticar
Whiticar
Winckler
Publication date
16 June 2009
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Marine Chemistry 115 (2009): 102-109, doi:10.1016/j.marchem.2009.07.001.Fossil methane from the large and dynamic marine gas hydrate reservoir has the potential to influence oceanic and atmospheric carbon pools. However, natural radiocarbon (14C) measurements of gas hydrate methane have been extremely limited, and their use as a source and process indicator has not yet been systematically established. In this study, gas hydrate-bound and dissolved methane recovered from six geologically and geographically distinct high-gas-flux cold seeps was found to be 98 to 100% fossil based on its 14C content. Given this prevalence of fossil methane and the small contribution of gas hydrate (≤1%) to the present-day atmospheric methane flux, non-fossil contributions of gas hydrate methane to the atmosphere are not likely to be quantitatively significant. This conclusion is consistent with contemporary atmospheric methane budget calculations. In combination with δ13C- and δD-methane measurements, we also determine the extent to which the low, but detectable, amounts of 14C (~ 1-2 percent modern carbon, pMC) in methane from two cold seeps might reflect in situ production from near-seafloor sediment organic carbon (SOC). A 14C mass balance approach using fossil methane and 14C-enriched SOC suggests that as much as 8 to 29% of hydrate-associated methane carbon may originate from SOC contained within the upper 6 meters of sediment. These findings validate the assumption of a predominantly fossil carbon source for marine gas hydrate, but also indicate that structural gas hydrate from at least certain cold seeps contains a component of methane produced during decomposition of non-fossil organic matter in near-surface sediment.This work was supported by the Office of Naval Research and Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). Partial support was also provided by the USGS Mendenhall Postdoctoral Research Fellowship Program to JWP, and NSF Chemical Oceanography (OCE-0327423) and Integrated Carbon Cycle Research (EAR- 0403949) program support to JEB
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