Automated Author Profile

Delwiche, Mark E

Current S-Index

7.3

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

2.4

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

3

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

93.6%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

1

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

(Table T1) Acetate ion concentration in interstitial waters of ODP Leg 204 sediments

No description available

Authors

  • Lorenson, Thomas D ;
  • Colwell, Frederick S ;
  • Delwiche, Mark E ;
  • Dougherty, Jennifer A
0 Citations0 Mentions96% FAIR2.4 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.7747962006

(Table T2) Hydrogen, helium, and methane gas concentrations in PCS gas samples of ODP Leg 204 sediments

No description available

Authors

  • Lorenson, Thomas D ;
  • Colwell, Frederick S ;
  • Delwiche, Mark E ;
  • Dougherty, Jennifer A
0 Citations0 Mentions96% FAIR2.4 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.7747972006

Spacing and amplitude of IR temperature anomalies and hydrate content of sediments from ODP Leg 304 sites (Table 1)

Large uncertainties about the energy resource potential and role in global climate change of gas hydrates result from uncertainty about how much hydrate is contained in marine sediments. During Leg 204 of the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) to the accretionary complex of the Cascadia subduction zone, we sampled the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) from the seafloor to its base in contrasting geological settings defined by a 3D seismic survey. By integrating results from different methods, including several new techniques developed for Leg 204, we overcome the problem of spatial under-sampling inherent in robust methods traditionally used for estimating the hydrate content of cores and obtain a high-resolution, quantitative estimate of the total amount and spatial variability of gas hydrate in this structural system. We conclude that high gas hydrate content (30–40% of pore space or 20–26% of total volume) is restricted to the upper tens of meters below the seafloor near the summit of the structure, where vigorous fluid venting occurs. Elsewhere, the average gas hydrate content of the sediments in the gas hydrate stability zone is generally <2% of the pore space, although this estimate may increase by a factor of 2 when patchy zones of locally higher gas hydrate content are included in the calculation. These patchy zones are structurally and stratigraphically controlled, contain up to 20% hydrate in the pore space when averaged over zones ~10 m thick, and may occur in up to ~20% of the region imaged by 3D seismic data. This heterogeneous gas hydrate distribution is an important constraint on models of gas hydrate formation in marine sediments and the response of the sediments to tectonic and environmental change.

Authors

  • Tréhu, Anne M ;
  • Long, Philip E ;
  • Torres, Marta E ;
  • Bohrmann, Gerhard ;
  • Rack, Frank R ;
  • Collett, Tim S ;
  • Goldberg, D S ;
  • Milkov, Alexei V ;
  • Riedel, Michael ;
  • Schultheiss, P ;
  • Bangs, N L ;
  • Barr, Samantha R ;
  • Borowski, Walter S ;
  • Claypool, George E ;
  • Delwiche, Mark E ;
  • Dickens, Gerald Roy ;
  • Gràcia, Eulàlia ;
  • Guerin, Gilles ;
  • Holland, M ;
  • Johnson, J E ;
  • Lee, Young-Joo ;
  • Liu, C-S ;
  • Su, Xin ;
  • Teichert, Barbara M A ;
  • Tomaru, Hitoshi ;
  • Vanneste, M ;
  • Watanabe, Mahito ;
  • Weinberger, J L
1 Citation0 Mentions88% FAIR2.5 Dataset Index
10.1594/pangaea.7224852004