4.7 Article

Gas geochemistry of the Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well, Alaska North Slope: Implications for gas hydrate exploration in the Arctic

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 343-360

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2010.02.007

Keywords

Gas hydrate; Arctic; Alaska; North slope; Gas geochemistry; Hydrocarbons; Isotopes; Biodegraded oil

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Gases were analyzed from well cuttings, core, gas hydrate, and formation tests at the BPXA-DOE-USGS Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well, drilled within the Milne Point Unit, Alaska North Slope. The well penetrated a portion of the Eileen gas hydrate deposit, which overlies the more deeply buried Prudhoe Bay, Milne Point, West Sak, and Kuparuk River oil fields. Gas sources in the upper 200 m are predominantly from microbial sources (C-1 isotopic compositions ranging from -86.4 to -80.6 parts per thousand). The C-1 isotopic composition becomes progressively enriched from 200 m to the top of the gas hydrate-bearing sands at 600 m. The tested gas hydrates occur in two primary intervals, units D and C, between 614.0 m and 664.7 m, containing a total of 29.3 m of gas hydrate-bearing sands. The hydrocarbon gases in cuttings and core samples from 604 to 914 m are composed of methane with very little ethane. The isotopic composition of the methane carbon ranges from -50.1 to -43.9 parts per thousand with several outliers, generally decreasing with depth. Gas samples collected by the Modular Formation Dynamics Testing (MDT) tool in the hydrate-bearing units were similarly composed mainly of methane, with up to 284 ppm ethane. The methane isotopic composition ranged from -48.2 to -48.0 parts per thousand in the C sand and from -48.4 to -46.6 parts per thousand in the D sand. Methane hydrogen isotopic composition ranged from 238 to -230 parts per thousand with slightly more depleted values in the deeper C sand. These results are consistent with the concept that the Eileen gas hydrates contain a mixture of deep-sourced, microbially biodegraded thermogenic gas, with lesser amounts of thermogenic oil-associated gas, and coal gas. Thermal gases are likely sourced from existing oil and gas accumulations that have migrated up-dip and/or up-fault and formed gas hydrate in response to climate cooling with permafrost formation. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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