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How gas-hydrate saturation and morphology control seismic attenuation: a case study from the south Hydrate Ridge

How gas-hydrate saturation and morphology control seismic attenuation: a case study from the south Hydrate Ridge
How gas-hydrate saturation and morphology control seismic attenuation: a case study from the south Hydrate Ridge
Prior studies have shown an ambiguous relationship between gas-hydrate saturation and seismic attenuation in different regions, but the effect of gas-hydrate morphology on seismic attenuation of hydrate-bearing sediments was often overlooked. We have combined seismic data with rock-physics modeling to elucidate how gas-hydrate saturation and morphology may control seismic attenuation. To extract P-wave attenuation, we process the vertical seismic profile data within a frequency range of 30-150 Hz and the sonic logging data within 10-15 kHz from three wells in the south Hydrate Ridge, offshore Oregon (USA), collected during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 204 in 2000. We calculate the P-wave attenuation using spectral matching and centroid frequency shift methods, and we use Archie's relationship to derive gas-hydrate saturation from the resistivity data above the bottom-simulating reflection at the same wells. To interpret the observed seismic attenuation in terms of the effects of the gas-hydrate saturation and the morphology, we use the hydrate-bearing effective sediment rock-physics model. By comparing the observed and model-predicted attenuation values, we infer that (1) seismic attenuation appears to not be dominated by any single factor - instead, its variation is likely governed by the gas-hydrate saturation and the morphology; (2) the relationship between seismic attenuation and gas-hydrate saturation varies with different hydrate morphologies; (3) the squirt flow, occurring at different compliances of adjacent pores driven by pressure gradients, may be responsible for the significantly large or small attenuation over a broad frequency range.
2324-8858
SD27-SD39
Ji, Aoshuang
1159c5c9-41aa-4d9f-b613-e18993fa8684
Zhu, Tieyuan
965ff7ca-e03b-4edd-97dc-17cceeb1359c
Marín-Moreno, Héctor
e466cafd-bd5c-47a1-8522-e6938e7086a4
Lei, Xiong
4f1c5e50-9773-4388-b1e2-ae64dce2ec23
Ji, Aoshuang
1159c5c9-41aa-4d9f-b613-e18993fa8684
Zhu, Tieyuan
965ff7ca-e03b-4edd-97dc-17cceeb1359c
Marín-Moreno, Héctor
e466cafd-bd5c-47a1-8522-e6938e7086a4
Lei, Xiong
4f1c5e50-9773-4388-b1e2-ae64dce2ec23

Ji, Aoshuang, Zhu, Tieyuan, Marín-Moreno, Héctor and Lei, Xiong (2021) How gas-hydrate saturation and morphology control seismic attenuation: a case study from the south Hydrate Ridge. Interpretation, 9 (2), SD27-SD39. (doi:10.1190/INT-2020-0137.1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Prior studies have shown an ambiguous relationship between gas-hydrate saturation and seismic attenuation in different regions, but the effect of gas-hydrate morphology on seismic attenuation of hydrate-bearing sediments was often overlooked. We have combined seismic data with rock-physics modeling to elucidate how gas-hydrate saturation and morphology may control seismic attenuation. To extract P-wave attenuation, we process the vertical seismic profile data within a frequency range of 30-150 Hz and the sonic logging data within 10-15 kHz from three wells in the south Hydrate Ridge, offshore Oregon (USA), collected during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 204 in 2000. We calculate the P-wave attenuation using spectral matching and centroid frequency shift methods, and we use Archie's relationship to derive gas-hydrate saturation from the resistivity data above the bottom-simulating reflection at the same wells. To interpret the observed seismic attenuation in terms of the effects of the gas-hydrate saturation and the morphology, we use the hydrate-bearing effective sediment rock-physics model. By comparing the observed and model-predicted attenuation values, we infer that (1) seismic attenuation appears to not be dominated by any single factor - instead, its variation is likely governed by the gas-hydrate saturation and the morphology; (2) the relationship between seismic attenuation and gas-hydrate saturation varies with different hydrate morphologies; (3) the squirt flow, occurring at different compliances of adjacent pores driven by pressure gradients, may be responsible for the significantly large or small attenuation over a broad frequency range.

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int-2020-0137.1 - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 27 November 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 April 2021
Published date: 1 May 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: This research was supported by T. Zhu’s startup funding from the Institute of Natural Gas Research at Pennsylvania State University. We thank T. Liu for his help on data processing and X. Hu for reading the draft. We also appreciate the anonymous reviewers and editors for invaluable suggestions.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484305
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484305
ISSN: 2324-8858
PURE UUID: 4de74812-3367-43b8-bd3c-6af949b238ad
ORCID for Héctor Marín-Moreno: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3412-1359

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Date deposited: 15 Nov 2023 17:52
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:11

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Contributors

Author: Aoshuang Ji
Author: Tieyuan Zhu
Author: Héctor Marín-Moreno ORCID iD
Author: Xiong Lei

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