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  4. Controls on subsurface methane fluxes and shallow gas formation in Baltic Sea sediment (Aarhus Bay, Denmark)
 
research article

Controls on subsurface methane fluxes and shallow gas formation in Baltic Sea sediment (Aarhus Bay, Denmark)

Flury, Sabine  
•
Roy, Hans
•
Dale, Andrew W.
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2016
Geochimica Et Cosmochimica Acta

Shallow gas accumulates in coastal marine sediments when the burial rate of reactive organic matter beneath the sulfate zone is sufficiently high and the methanogenic zone is sufficiently deep. We investigated the controls on methane production and free methane gas accumulation along a 400 m seismo-acoustic transect across a sharp transition from gas-free into gas-bearing sediment in Aarhus Bay (Denmark). Twelve gravity cores were taken, in which the pore water was analyzed for inorganic solutes while rates of organic carbon mineralization were measured experimentally by (SO42-)-S-35 radiotracer method. The thickness of organic-rich Holocene mud increased from 5 to 10 m along the transect concomitant with a shallowing of the depth of the sulfate-methane transition from >4 m to 2.5 m. In spite of drastic differences in the distribution of methane and sulfate in the sediment along the transect, there were only small differences in total mineralization, and methanogenesis was only equivalent to about 1% of sulfate reduction. Shallow gas appeared where the mud thickness exceeded 8-9 m. Rates of methanogenesis increased along the transect as did the upward diffusive flux of methane. Interestingly, the increase in the sedimentation rate and Holocene mud thickness had only a modest direct effect on methanogenesis rates in deep sediments. This increase in methane flux, however, triggered a shallowing of the sulfate-methane transition which resulted in a large increase in methanogenesis at the top of the methanogenic zone. Thus, our results demonstrate a positive feedback mechanism that causes a strong enhancement of methanogenesis and explains the apparently abrupt appearance of gas when a threshold thickness of organic-rich mud is exceeded. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.gca.2016.05.037
Web of Science ID

WOS:000380752700017

Author(s)
Flury, Sabine  
Roy, Hans
Dale, Andrew W.
Fossing, Henrik
Toth, Zsuzsanna
Spiess, Volkhard
Jensen, Jorn Bo
Jorgensen, Bo Barker
Date Issued

2016

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Geochimica Et Cosmochimica Acta
Volume

188

Start page

297

End page

309

Subjects

Marine

•

Seabed

•

Gas accumulation

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Methanogenesis

•

Sulfate flux

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AOM

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Diffusion

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Seismo-acoustic transect

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Sulfate reduction rate

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S-35 experiment

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Organic matter mineralization

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
RIVER  
Available on Infoscience
October 18, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/130287
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