Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of Bengal

Diagenetically formed magnetic minerals at marine methane seep sites are potential archive of past fluid flow and could provide important constraints on the evolution of past methane seepage dynamics and gas hydrate formation over geologic time. In this study, we carried out integrated rock magnetic...

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Main Authors: F. Badesab, P. Dewangan, V. Gaikwad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.592557/full
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spelling doaj-3769079ce7cb4df7a6027414db73b8702020-11-25T04:10:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632020-11-01810.3389/feart.2020.592557592557Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of BengalF. BadesabP. DewanganV. GaikwadDiagenetically formed magnetic minerals at marine methane seep sites are potential archive of past fluid flow and could provide important constraints on the evolution of past methane seepage dynamics and gas hydrate formation over geologic time. In this study, we carried out integrated rock magnetic, and mineralogical analyses, supported by electron microscope observations, on a seep impacted sediment core to unravel the linkage between greigite magnetism, methane seepage dynamics, and evolution of shallow gas hydrate system in the K-G basin. Three sediment magnetic zones (MZ-1, MZ-2, and MZ-3) have been identified based on the down-core variations in rock magnetic properties. Two events of intense methane seepage are identified. Repeated occurences of authigenic carbonates throughout the core indicate the episodic intensification of anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) at the studied site. Marked depletion in magnetic susceptibility manifested by the presence of chemosynthetic shells (Calyptogena Sp.), methane-derived authigenic carbonates, and abundant pyrite grains provide evidences on intense methane seepage events at this site. Fracture-controlled fluid transport supported the formation of gas hydrates (distributed and massive) at this site. Three greigite bearing sediment intervals (G1, G2, G3) within the magnetically depleted zone (MZ-2) are probably the paleo-gas hydrate (distributed-type vein filling) intervals. A strong linkage among clay content, formation of veined hydrate deposits, precipitation of authigenic carbonates and greigite preservation is evident. Hydrate crystallizes within faults/fractures formed as the methane gas migrates through the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ). Formation of authigenic carbonate layers coupled with clay deposits restricted the upward migrating methane, which led to the formation of distributed-type vein filling hydrate deposits. A closed system created by veined hydrates trapped the sulfide and limited its availability thereby, causing arrestation of pyritization and favored the formation and preservation of greigite in G1, G2, G3.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.592557/fullcoldseepmethane hydraterock magnetismdiagenesisBay of Bengal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Badesab
P. Dewangan
V. Gaikwad
spellingShingle F. Badesab
P. Dewangan
V. Gaikwad
Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of Bengal
Frontiers in Earth Science
cold
seep
methane hydrate
rock magnetism
diagenesis
Bay of Bengal
author_facet F. Badesab
P. Dewangan
V. Gaikwad
author_sort F. Badesab
title Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of Bengal
title_short Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of Bengal
title_full Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of Bengal
title_fullStr Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of Bengal
title_full_unstemmed Magnetic Mineral Diagenesis in a Newly Discovered Active Cold Seep Site in the Bay of Bengal
title_sort magnetic mineral diagenesis in a newly discovered active cold seep site in the bay of bengal
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Earth Science
issn 2296-6463
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Diagenetically formed magnetic minerals at marine methane seep sites are potential archive of past fluid flow and could provide important constraints on the evolution of past methane seepage dynamics and gas hydrate formation over geologic time. In this study, we carried out integrated rock magnetic, and mineralogical analyses, supported by electron microscope observations, on a seep impacted sediment core to unravel the linkage between greigite magnetism, methane seepage dynamics, and evolution of shallow gas hydrate system in the K-G basin. Three sediment magnetic zones (MZ-1, MZ-2, and MZ-3) have been identified based on the down-core variations in rock magnetic properties. Two events of intense methane seepage are identified. Repeated occurences of authigenic carbonates throughout the core indicate the episodic intensification of anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) at the studied site. Marked depletion in magnetic susceptibility manifested by the presence of chemosynthetic shells (Calyptogena Sp.), methane-derived authigenic carbonates, and abundant pyrite grains provide evidences on intense methane seepage events at this site. Fracture-controlled fluid transport supported the formation of gas hydrates (distributed and massive) at this site. Three greigite bearing sediment intervals (G1, G2, G3) within the magnetically depleted zone (MZ-2) are probably the paleo-gas hydrate (distributed-type vein filling) intervals. A strong linkage among clay content, formation of veined hydrate deposits, precipitation of authigenic carbonates and greigite preservation is evident. Hydrate crystallizes within faults/fractures formed as the methane gas migrates through the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ). Formation of authigenic carbonate layers coupled with clay deposits restricted the upward migrating methane, which led to the formation of distributed-type vein filling hydrate deposits. A closed system created by veined hydrates trapped the sulfide and limited its availability thereby, causing arrestation of pyritization and favored the formation and preservation of greigite in G1, G2, G3.
topic cold
seep
methane hydrate
rock magnetism
diagenesis
Bay of Bengal
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.592557/full
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