Seismic stratigraphy and attenuation of gas-hydrate zones within Hikurangi and Gondwana margins, eastern New Zealand

SUMMARY Gas hydrates that occur on many continental margins have received global attention. In reflection seismic imaging, the bottom-simulating reflector (BSR) is a common indicator of gas hydrates. However, it is difficult to identify gas hydrates and quantify their amounts through the BSR alone....

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Veröffentlicht in:Geophysical journal international 2023-09, Vol.234 (3), p.1603-1616
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Yichuan, Bedle, Heather, Marfurt, Kurt J
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SUMMARY Gas hydrates that occur on many continental margins have received global attention. In reflection seismic imaging, the bottom-simulating reflector (BSR) is a common indicator of gas hydrates. However, it is difficult to identify gas hydrates and quantify their amounts through the BSR alone. For gas-hydrate characterization, it is therefore useful to measure seismic stratigraphic and attenuation attributes. Short-scale patterns of layering that contain information about the amount and mechanism of gas hydrates can be identified through stratigraphic and attenuation attributes. We measure the complete time-variant spectra by using sparse strongest peaks, and the spectral differences at different times through attenuation parameters Q–1 and γ. The traditional Q–1 is associated with the attenuation of the frequency-dependent part of wavefield, and the γ characterizes the frequency-independent attenuation. The measurement approach is straightforward and requires no sophisticated inverse algorithm and is applied to surface seismic data acquired over the Hikurangi and Gondwana margins, eastern New Zealand. High-quality spectral and attenuation images are obtained. Spectral attributes correlate with BSRs and large positive Q–1 and negative γ-values are below and above the BSRs, which are interpreted as being related to free-gas and gas-hydrate accumulations. These results will aid the quantification of gas hydrates and the assessment of their roles as an energy resource, as a potential geological hazard, and in climate change and ocean warming.
ISSN:0956-540X
1365-246X
DOI:10.1093/gji/ggad148