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      Multiple drivers and controls of pockmark formation across the Canterbury Margin, New Zealand

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          Abstract

          Shallow seabed depressions attributed to focused fluid seepage, known as pockmarks, have been documented in all continental margins. In this study, we demonstrate how pockmark formation can be the result of a combination of multiple factors—fluid type, overpressures, seafloor sediment type, stratigraphy and bottom currents. We integrate multibeam echosounder and seismic reflection data, sediment cores and pore water samples, with numerical models of groundwater and gas hydrates, from the Canterbury Margin (off New Zealand). More than 6800 surface pockmarks, reaching densities of 100 per km 2, and an undefined number of buried pockmarks, are identified in the middle to outer shelf and lower continental slope. Fluid conduits across the shelf and slope include shallow to deep chimneys/pipes. Methane with a biogenic and/or thermogenic origin is the main fluid forming flow and escape features, although saline and freshened groundwaters may also be seeping across the slope. The main drivers of fluid flow and seepage are overpressure across the slope generated by sediment loading and thin sediment overburden above the overpressured interval in the outer shelf. Other processes (e.g. methane generation and flow, a reduction in hydrostatic pressure due to sea‐level lowering) may also account for fluid flow and seepage features, particularly across the shelf. Pockmark occurrence coincides with muddy sediments at the seafloor, whereas their planform is elongated by bottom currents.

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          How permeable are clays and shales?

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            Escape of methane gas from the seabed along the West Spitsbergen continental margin

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              Marine pore-water sulfate profiles indicate in situ methane flux from underlying gas hydrate

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Basin Research
                Basin Research
                Wiley
                0950-091X
                1365-2117
                August 2022
                March 17 2022
                August 2022
                : 34
                : 4
                : 1374-1399
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research GEOMAR Kiel Germany
                [2 ] Marine Geology & Seafloor Surveying Department of Geosciences University of Malta Msida Malta
                [3 ] Institute of Geosciences Christian‐Albrechts‐Universität zu Kiel Kiel Germany
                [4 ] Department of Geology University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand
                [5 ] National Institute for Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) Wellington New Zealand
                [6 ] Hydrology Program New Mexico Tech Socorro New Mexico USA
                [7 ] Department of Geological Sciences Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka Nigeria
                [8 ] MARUM—Centre for Marine Environmental Sciences University of Bremen Bremen Germany
                [9 ] CNR‐ISP Institute of Polar Sciences Bologna Italy
                Article
                10.1111/bre.12663
                8460c7fd-521a-4020-afb0-bfbf0f00f7fd
                © 2022

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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