scholarly journals Oil and gas seeps of the Puale Bay - Becharof Lake - Wide Bay region, northern Alaska Peninsula

10.14509/7189 ◽  
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. B. Blodgett ◽  
K. H. Clautice
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-60
Author(s):  
John Decker ◽  
Philip Teas ◽  
Daniel Orange ◽  
Bernie B. Bernard

From 2015 to 2018, TGS conducted a comprehensive multiclient oil and gas seep hunting survey in the Gulf of Mexico. The basis for identifying seeps on the sea bottom was a high-resolution Multi-Beam Echo Sounder survey, mapping approximately 880,000 km2 of the sea bottom deeper than 750 m water depth, at a bathymetric resolution of 15 m and a backscatter resolution of 5 m. We have identified more than 5000 potential oil and/or gas seeps, and of those, we cored approximately 1500 for hydrocarbon geochemical analysis. The sea bottom features best related to hydrocarbon seepage in the GoM are high backscatter circular features with or without bathymetric expression, high backscatter features with “flow” appearance, mud volcanoes, pock marks, brine pools, “popcorn” texture, faults, and anticlinal crests. We also tracked gas plumes in the water column back to the sea bottom to provide an additional criterion for hydrocarbon seepage. Cores from sea bottom targets recovered liquid oil, tar, and gas hydrates. Oil extract and gas analyses of samples from most target types produced values substantially higher than background in oil and gas.


1971 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
C. P. Meakin

Seeps are of interest to the petroleum geologist because:—they indicate a section capable of producing hydrocarbons, and very often are related to a petroleum accumulation, andmany of the Important oil-producing regions were discovered by surface indications of petroleum.There are five main types of seeps:- those emerging from homoclinal beds exposed at the surface; those associated with beds in which the oil was formed; those arising from definite large petroleum accumulations, either bared by erosion, or ruptured by faulting; those emerging at an unconformity; and those associated with intrusions. These types of seeps are associated with, and have led to the discovery of many major oil fields throughout the world.The reports of oil and gas seeps in Australia, however, are only meagre. This may be because:—of a lack of exploration and documentation,the basins are a type that do not have the conditions necessary to produce seeps,the seeps that do exist are unrecognized. For instance, even large gas seeps may pass unnoticed in dry areas,of a lack of petroleum.The detection of the gaseous hydrocarbons, methane, ethane, propane and the butanes, in soils by gas chromatography could aid petroleum exploration because:—it would enable the detection of gas seeps over a potential petroleum field that would otherwise remain undetected, andeven for small quantities of hydrocarbon gases, low ratios of methane to higher hydrocarbons indicate a petroliferous origin.This is the technique of geochemical prospecting. It is based on three assumptions:—It must be possible for the hydrocarbons to migrate to the surface.The concentration of migrating hydrocarbons should not be altered by chemical reaction, bacteria, or hydrocarbons derived from another source.An anomalous hydrocarbon concentration at the surface can be correlated with a petroleum deposit.A search of the literature shows that, on the whole, these assumptions are correct. It would therefore appear that geochemical prospecting, particularly when used in conjunction with geological and geophysical work, can be useful for locating petroleum deposits.


The Condor ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian D Uher-Koch ◽  
Kenneth G Wright ◽  
Joel A Schmutz

Abstract Adult birds may use the production of offspring as a measure of habitat quality when prospecting for territories, increasing competition for productive territories. We evaluated the impact of breeding success on territory retention of Pacific (Gavia pacifica) and Yellow-billed (G. adamsii) loons in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska on the Arctic Coastal Plain of northern Alaska using mark–resight data and multi-state modeling. We also used behavioral observations of brood-rearing adult loons to quantify the frequency of visits by prospecting loons. We hypothesized that increased competition for productive territories would result in a decrease in territory retention rates. Territory retention rates the year following successful breeding attempts were only slightly lower (0.90) than after failed breeding attempts (0.93), and few territories were consistently successful across years. Overall territory retention rates were high (0.92) and similar for both species, suggesting that adults were able to defend their territories successfully. Males had higher territory retention rates than females, but we found no influence of mass (a possible proxy for fighting ability) on territory retention. These observations, coupled with the high frequency of visits by prospecting loons, provide additional evidence that site familiarity may provide advantages to territory holders. Quantifying territory retention behaviors may also inform land management decisions for oil and gas development in areas where loons are present. High territory retention rates, frequency of visits by prospectors, and limited habitat where new territories can be established suggest that breeding habitat in northern Alaska is saturated and may be limiting Yellow-billed Loon populations. In contrast, Pacific Loons attempting to acquire a territory may be able to form new territories on smaller, unoccupied lakes.


Author(s):  
Don Dumond

By the late centuries B.C., occupations assigned to Norton people are reported from a southern point on the Alaska Peninsula, then north and eastward along coastal areas to a point east of the present border with Canada. The relatively uniform material culture suggests origin from the north and west (pottery from Asia, chipped-stone artifacts from predecessors in northern Alaska), as well as from the south and east (lip ornaments or labrets, and pecked-stone lamps burning sea-mammal oil). In early centuries A.D., Norton people north and east of Bering Strait yielded to Asian-influenced peoples more strongly focused on coastal resources, while those south of the Strait collected in sites along salmon-rich streams where they developed with increasing sedentarism until about A.D. 1000, when final Thule-related expansion along coasts from the north displaced or incorporated Norton remnants.


2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
R.P. Kruglyakova ◽  
Y.A. Byakov ◽  
M.V. Kruglyakova ◽  
L.A. Chalenko ◽  
N.T. Shevtsova

2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 112-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Dumond

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