Authors / CoAuthors
Nicholas, W.A. | Nichol, S.L. | Howard, F.J.F.
Abstract
The release of fluid to the seabed from deeper sources is a process that can influence seabed geomorphology and associated habitats, with pockmarks a common indicator. In May 2012, Geoscience Australia led a multidisciplinary marine survey in Joseph Bonaparte Gulf, to facilitate an assessment of the potential for fluid leakage associated with geological storage of CO2 at depth within the Petrel Sub-basin. Multibeam bathymetry and backscatter mapping (652 km2), combined with acoustic sub-bottom profiling (655 line-km) and geomorphological and sediment characterisation of the seabed was undertaken. Seabed geomorphic environments identified from 2 m resolution bathymetry include carbonate banks and ridges, palaeochannels, pockmark fields and fields of low amplitude hummocks. This paper focuses on pockmarks as indicators of fluid seepage from the subsurface. Three principal pockmark morphologies (Type I, II and III) are present with their distribution non-random. Small unit (Type I) depressions occur on plains and in palaeochannels, but are most commonly within larger (Type II) composite pockmarks on plains. Type III pockmarks, intermediate in scale, are only present in palaeochannels. The timing of pockmark formation is constrained by radiocarbon dating to 14.5 cal ka BP, or later, when a rapid rise in sea-level would have flooded much of outer Joseph Bonaparte Gulf. Our data suggest the principal source of fluids to the seabed is from the breakdown of organic material deposited during the last glacial maxima lowstand of sea-level, and presently trapped beneath marine sediments. These results assist in ameliorating uncertainties associated with potential CO2 storage in this region.
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nonGeographicDataset
eCat Id
75613
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Keywords
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- External Publication
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- seabed
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- sedimentology
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- geological storage of CO2
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- marine survey
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- geomorphology
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- marine
- Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
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- Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
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- Published_Internal
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2013-01-01T00:00:00
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