Scientists Find Frozen
Methane Gas Deposit
January 30, 2006 — By Alicia Chang, Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Scientists have
discovered an undersea deposit of frozen methane just off the Southern
California coast, but whether it can be harnessed as a potential energy
source is unknown.
In recent years, there has been a growing interest in tapping methane
hydrates, ice-like crystals that form at low temperatures and high
pressure in seabeds and in Arctic permafrost.
Scientists estimate that the methane trapped in previously known frozen
reservoirs around the globe could power the world for centuries. But
finding the technology to mine such deposits has proved elusive.
The newly discovered deposit, believed to be substantial in size, was
found about 15 miles off the coast at a depth of about 2,600 feet, at
the summit of an undersea mud volcano. Scientists were conducting an
unrelated study when they came across the volcano, which sits on top of
an active fault zone in the Santa Monica Basin.
The discovery is detailed in the February issue of the journal Geology.
The ecosystem surrounding the methane hydrate site was unlike any of the
other vast hydrate deposits around the world. Scientists found seashells
and clams with unique chemical characteristics, suggesting the area
experiences an extreme flux of methane gas mixing with water, said Jim
Hein, a marine geologist at the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park.
In additional to technical problems standing in the way of mining
methane hydrates, Hein said mining this deposit probably would be
difficult because of its proximity to shipping lanes from Los Angeles
and Long Beach.
Some scientists also worry about the environmental effects of such
large-scale gas deposits. Hydrates are estimated to contain about three
times as much methane as is currently in the atmosphere, and some
scientists say releasing it could lead to global warming and change the
world's climate.
Source: Associated Press
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