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Vodyanitskii mud volcano,Sorokin trough,Black Sea: Geological characterization and quantification of gas bubble streams
Authors:Heiko Sahling  Gerhard Bohrmann  Yuriy G Artemov  André Bahr  Markus Brüning  Stephan A Klapp  Ingo Klaucke  Elena Kozlova  Aneta Nikolovska  Thomas Pape  Anja Reitz  Klaus Wallmann
Institution:1. MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences and Faculty of Geosciences, University of Bremen, Klagenfurter Strasse, 28359 Bremen, Germany;2. IBSS – Institute of Biology of the Southern Seas, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Nakhimov Prosp. 2, IBSS, UA-99011, Sevastopol, Ukraine;3. IFM-GEOMAR – Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences, Wischhofstr. 1–3, 24148 Kiel, Germany;4. UNESCO-MSU Center for Marine Geosciences, Geological Faculty, Moscow State University, Vorobjevy Gory, Moscow 119899, Russia
Abstract:Vodyanitskii mud volcano is located at a depth of about 2070 m in the Sorokin Trough, Black sea. It is a 500-m wide and 20-m high cone surrounded by a depression, which is typical of many mud volcanoes in the Black Sea. 75 kHz sidescan sonar show different generations of mud flows that include mud breccia, authigenic carbonates, and gas hydrates that were sampled by gravity coring. The fluids that flow through or erupt with the mud are enriched in chloride (up to ∼650 mmol L−1 at ∼150-cm sediment depth) suggesting a deep source, which is similar to the fluids of the close-by Dvurechenskii mud volcano. Direct observation with the remotely operated vehicle Quest revealed gas bubbles emanating at two distinct sites at the crest of the mud volcano, which confirms earlier observations of bubble-induced hydroacoustic anomalies in echosounder records. The sediments at the main bubble emission site show a thermal anomaly with temperatures at ∼60 cm sediment depth that were 0.9 °C warmer than the bottom water. Chemical and isotopic analyses of the emanated gas revealed that it consisted primarily of methane (99.8%) and was of microbial origin (δD-CH4 = −170.8‰ (SMOW), δ13C-CH4 = −61.0‰ (V-PDB), δ13C-C2H6 = −44.0‰ (V-PDB)). The gas flux was estimated using the video observations of the ROV. Assuming that the flux is constant with time, about 0.9 ± 0.5 × 106 mol of methane is released every year. This value is of the same order-of-magnitude as reported fluxes of dissolved methane released with pore water at other mud volcanoes. This suggests that bubble emanation is a significant pathway transporting methane from the sediments into the water column.
Keywords:Fluid seepage  Methane flux  Mud volcanism  Bubble emanation
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