Earthquake gives rise to methane seepage at seafloor

environmentearthquakemethane seepageseafloorgeochemical analysis
Pictures taken by the remotely operated vehicle ROV KIEL 6000 in September 2010 show fresh traces of the Maule earthquake at the seabed.
(c) ROV-Team, GEOMAR

 Researchers publish findings after studying aftermath of 2010 earthquake in Chile Most severe earthquakes take place beneath the seafloor. For a long time, it has been assumed that they were responsible for creating pathways that allowed gases from the Earth's interior to seep into the seawater. Now, with observations from the 2010 Maule earthquake in Central Chile, complemented by subsequent geochemical analysis and geophysical modelling, the scientists from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Center for Ocean Research Kiel are now able to prove this connection. On 27 February 2010, Chile was hit with a 8.8 magnitude earthquake, which triggered a tsunami that affected the coastal sections of Central Chile. It was one of the ten most powerful earthquakes ever measured. The number of victims was lower than what one would have expected from an earthquake of that magnitude. However, the property damage cost more than US$30 billion. The earthquake became one of the best observed and the tremors were scientifically measured, as research teams from several countries (including a team from GEOMAR) had installed measuring devices in the region. During an expedition on the SONNE research vessel months after the event, they were able to document the aftermath of the earthquake, using the remotely operated vehicle ROV KIEL 6000. Based on their observations, the team from GEOMAR and The Cluster of Excellence "The Future Ocean" has published their findings of the resultant methane emissions from the seabed in the international Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems journal. They had proved that the Maule earthquake in 2010 had caused new gas seepage off the coast of Chile. "A link between methanedischarge at the seabed and strong earthquakes has long been suspected, but it is difficult to prove. The affected seabeds are often several thousand metres deep and are hard to reach. Thanks to the data from 2010, we are now able to prove this," said lead author Dr Jacob Geersen in German. The study was based mainly on data collected during the SONNE's expedition in September and October 2010. The expedition, which had actually been planned years earlier, led exactly to the region where the earthquake's epicentre had been seven months earlier. In addition, during the ROV KIEL 6000's excursions to the ocean depths, it recorded fresh cracks on the seabed. "They hadobviously emerged during the quake, just seven months before our expedition. On a geological time scale, this is just a blink of an eye," explained co-author Dr Peter Linke from GEOMAR, who was then the expedition coordinator. Using modern sensor technology, the team detected a very high methane content in the water around the cracks as early as 2010. More accurate analysis showed that the methane had originated not from the uppermost layers of the ocean, but the deeper areas of the Earth's crust. The geophysical and geochemical data, the images from the ROV KIEL 6000, as well as the samples obtained by the authors, have been supplemented by geophysical stress calculations of the subsurface. "The observations show that the earthquake has re-activated deep faults in the ground, which in turn serve as channels for methane," explained co-author Dr Florian Scholz from GEOMAR. The study shows, on an international scale, that strong earthquakes play an important role in the formation of methane seepage at the seafloor and the transport of gases from deep within the Earth's crust up to the surface. "However, moreexpeditions into earthquake regions are necessary before it is possible to tell how much gases are being released by tectonic processes, whether and how these processes vary over time, and whether the gases can reach the atmosphere," said Dr Geersen. See here for further information Link to the study

The remotely operated vehicle ROV KIEL 6000 being lifted on board the research vessel SONNE after a dive to the Chilean subduction zone.
(c) Bernd Grundmann, GEOMAR

מאמר זה תורגם אוטומטית וייתכן שהוא מכיל אי דיוקים קלים; אנא עיינו בגרסה המקורית באנגלית במקרה של ספק.

עוד

Not a Swimmer? Discover SSI's New Survival Swim Program
AI KB

לא יודעים לשחות? גלו את תוכנית השחייה להישרדות החדשה של SSI

לא יודעים לשחות? גלו כיצד תוכנית Survival Swim של SSI עוזרת לכם לבנות ביטחון עצמי, להתגבר על הפחד ולהתחיל את המסע שלכם לעולם התת-ימי.

לפני 3 ימים
Adam-Moore
How to Become a Professional Diver with Purpose: Turning Passion into Impact
AI KB

איך להפוך לצולל מקצוען עם מטרה: להפוך תשוקה להשפעה

למד כיצד להפוך לצולל מקצועי בעזרת המדריך המפורט שלב אחר שלב. גלה מסלולי הדרכה, אפשרויות קריירה ומיומנויות הדרושות כדי להפוך את הצלילה לקריירה עם משמעות.

לפני 9 ימים
predrag-vuckovic
Frenzel Equalization Explained: What It Is and How It Works
AI KB

הסבר על השוואת לחצים בשיטת “פרנזל“: מה זה ואיך זה עובד

למד מהו השוואת לחצים בשיטת “פרנזל“, איך היא עובדת ולמה צוללים חופשיים משתמשים בטכניקה זו כדי לאזן ביעילות ולהגן על אוזניהם מתחת למים.

לפני 13 ימים
Coral-olga-ga-unsplash
How Grenada's Underwater Art Park Is Supporting Coral Recovery
AI KB

כיצד פארק האמנות התת-ימי של גרנדה תומך בשיקום האלמוגים

גלו כיצד אמנות תת-מימית בגרנדה תורמת לשיקום שוניות האלמוגים. גלו את פרויקט השונית המלאכותית, מדוע הוא חשוב לצוללים וכיצד ניתן לקחת בו חלק.

לפני 16 ימים
jakob-owens-unsplash
World Shootout Marks 20 Years with Image of the Two Decades
AI KB

World Shootout חוגגת 20 שנה עם תמונה של שני העשורים

למדו על תחרות World Shootout's Image of the Two Decades, כולל תאריכים מרכזיים, תהליך השיפוט וכיצד צילום תת-מימי מעצב את עולם הצלילה.

לפני 19 ימים