Authors
Shyam Chand, Tim A Minshull, Davide Gei, José M Carcione
Publication date
2004/11/1
Journal
Geophysical Journal International
Volume
159
Issue
2
Pages
573-590
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
The presence of gas hydrate in oceanic sediments is mostly identified by bottom-simulating reflectors (BSRs), reflection events with reversed polarity following the trend of the seafloor. Attempts to quantify the amount of gas hydrate present in oceanic sediments have been based mainly on the presence or absence of a BSR and its relative amplitude. Recent studies have shown that a BSR is not a necessary criterion for the presence of gas hydrates, but rather its presence depends on the type of sediments and the in situ conditions. The influence of hydrate on the physical properties of sediments overlying the BSR is determined by the elastic properties of their constituents and on sediment microstructure. In this context several approaches have been developed to predict the physical properties of sediments, and thereby quantify the amount of gas/gas hydrate present from observed deviations of these properties …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Chand, TA Minshull, D Gei, JM Carcione - Geophysical Journal International, 2004