4.7 Article

New records of Oligocene diffuse hydrocarbon seeps, northern Cascadia margin

Journal

PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
Volume 390, Issue -, Pages 116-129

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.05.001

Keywords

Methane; Hydrocarbon seep; Cascadia margin; Carbon and oxygen isotopes; Benthic foraminifera; Siletzia

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Fossil methane seeps are preserved in late Eocene through Pliocene marine sedimentary units of the Cascadia margin of the northeastern Pacific. All Cascadia fossil seeps are situated in the uplifted accretionary wedge that overlies extensive Middle Eocene coal-bearing units and the Paleocene-Early Eocene Siletzia large igneous province. This study describes eight previously unrecorded Oligocene seeps, all of which are identified by small, scattered carbonates with or without accompanying characteristic seep macrofauna, from both inner and outer shelf depths. We interpret these deposits as reflecting spatially and temporally diffuse seepage of hydrocarbon-enriched fluids, sourced from various carbon sources within the actively deforming accretionary prism, and term them diffuse seeps. delta C-13 and delta O-18 values from foraminiferal carbonate from the studied stratigraphic units have broad variability. Authigenic carbonates occurring as nodules, blebs, burrow fill and fracture fill indicated microbial and thermogenic methane, and multiple fluid flow pathways from within the actively deforming accretionary wedge. It is apparent that the complex fluid-flow regime observed in modern seeps of the Cascadia margin is a continuation of one established in the late Eocene. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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