Title of article
The effect of methane hydrate morphology and water saturation on seismic wave attenuation in sand under shallow sub-seafloor conditions
Author/Authors
Best، نويسنده , , Angus I. and Priest، نويسنده , , Jeffrey A. and Clayton، نويسنده , , Christopher R.I. and Rees، نويسنده , , Emily V.L. and Priest، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
10
From page
78
To page
87
Abstract
A better understanding of seismic wave attenuation in hydrate-bearing sediments is needed for the improved geophysical quantification of seafloor methane hydrates, important for climate change, geohazard and economic resource assessment. Hence, we conducted a series of small strain (<10−6), seismic frequency (50–550 Hz), laboratory resonant column experiments on synthetic methane hydrate-bearing sands under excess-water seafloor conditions. The results show a complex dependence of P- and S-wave attenuation on hydrate saturation and morphology. P- and S-wave attenuation in excess-water hydrate-bearing sand is much higher than in excess-gas hydrate-bearing sand and increases with hydrate saturation between 0 and 0.44 (the experimental range). Theoretical modelling suggests that load-bearing hydrate is an important cause of heightened attenuation for both P- and S-waves in gas and water saturated sands, while pore-filling hydrate also contributes significantly to P-wave attenuation in water saturated sands. A squirt flow attenuation mechanism, related to microporous hydrate and low aspect ratio pores at the interface between sand grains and hydrate, is thought to be responsible for the heightened levels of attenuation in hydrate-bearing sands at low hydrate saturations (<0.44).
Keywords
Seismic attenuation , Hydrate , sediment , morphology
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number
2331702
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