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Methane-related authigenic carbonates from the Black Sea: geochemical characterisation and relation to seeping fluids

Authors :
Bryan T. Cronin
L. Mazurenko
E. N. Poludetkina
M.K. Ivanov
Alina Stadnitskaia
John Parnell
T.C.E. van Weering
Adriano Mazzini
Source :
Marine Geology. 212:153-181
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2004.

Abstract

During TTR11 Cruise (2001), three areas of active fluid venting and mud volcanism were investigated in the Black Sea below the oxic zone at depths varying between 800 and 2200 m. Authigenic carbonates often associated with microbial mats were recovered from the sea floor and the shallow subsurface. Structural and petrographic observations allowed the distinction of five different types of authigenic carbonates; three of these consist of carbonate-cemented layered hemipelagic sedimentary units, while the other two consist of carbonate-cemented mud breccia sediment and authigenic micrite slabs. The carbonate cements consist predominantly of micritic Mg calcite. Their d 13 CCaCO3 varies between 8.5x and 46.9x at the different sampling locations,indicatingthatauthigenic carbonatesincorporate variableproportions ofcarbonderivedfromthe anaerobicoxidationof methane (AOM), the oxidation of organic matter and from sea water. Methane is the dominant component among other hydrocarbon gases in these sediments. Its relative amount varies from 99.9% to 95.1% of total hydrocarbon gases and its d 13 C values range fromi40xtoi74x. Methane in sediments associated with the carbonate crusts shows carbon isotopic values 25–30x lighter than the authigenic carbonates at all the studied sites, indicating that methane present in the seeping fluids confers a distinct isotopic signature to the carbonate deposits at each location. Models proposed for the formation of carbonate slabs in the subsurface imply methane seepage impeded by homogenous clayey laminae or by pre-existing slabs, coupled with microbial activity oxidising methane and organic matter present in the sediment. Mud breccia crust pavements on the sea floor form by carbonate cementation of methane-charged sediment. Gas saturation of the sediment is confirmed by the presence of gas hydrates, whose shape indicates an association with authigenic carbonates, supporting the idea that sedimentary structures can control gas distribution.

Details

ISSN :
00253227
Volume :
212
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine Geology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4314a0ccc990732da8bf4ba47225179e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2004.08.001