Litcius/Paper detail

Influence of tectonics on global scale distribution of geological methane emissions

Giancarlo Ciotoli, Monia Procesi, Giuseppe Etiope, Umberto Fracassi, Guido Ventura

2020Nature Communications53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Earth’s hydrocarbon degassing through gas-oil seeps, mud volcanoes and diffuse microseepage is a major natural source of methane (CH 4 ) to the atmosphere. While carbon dioxide degassing is typically associated with extensional tectonics, volcanoes, and geothermal areas, CH 4 seepage mostly occurs in petroleum-bearing sedimentary basins, but the role of tectonics in degassing is known only for some case studies at local scale. Here, we perform a global scale geospatial analysis to assess how the presence of hydrocarbon fields, basin geodynamics and the type of faults control CH 4 seepage. Combining georeferenced data of global inventories of onshore seeps, faults, sedimentary basins, petroleum fields and heat flow, we find that hydrocarbon seeps prevail in petroleum fields within convergent basins with heat flow ≤ 98 mW m −2 , and along any type of brittle tectonic structure, mostly in reverse fault settings. Areas potentially hosting additional seeps and microseepage are identified through a global seepage favourability model.

Topics & Concepts

GeologyTectonicsSedimentary basinEarth scienceGeothermal gradientSedimentary rockMud volcanoStructural basinVolcanoPetroleumFault (geology)MethaneGeochemistryGeomorphologyPetrologyGeophysicsPaleontologyEcologyBiologyAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysisMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena