DOE - Fossil Energy Techline - Issued on: October 20, 2000 Deep Dive for Gas Hydrates to be Tracked on DOE Web SiteFire-in-the-Ice Web Site Goes Active October 23Gulf of Mexico - Off Louisiana - Only a handful of the world's scientists and petroleum engineers have ever been "up close and personal" with a methane hydrate deposit deep on the ocean floor. Yet, these largely-unexplored ice-like formations may hold almost unimaginable quantities of natural gas, a potential huge resource for an energy-hungry world.
Now students in classrooms around the country, and others with access to the Internet, will be able to share the experiences of three researchers who will descend more than a mile deep into the Gulf of Mexico next week to study ocean hydrates in their natural state. Under the sponsorship of the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory, the deep ocean research submersible ALVIN, with its 3-person crew, will make two dives - one on October 24, the other on October 26 - to study and retrieve samples of hydrates on the Gulf of Mexico floor, some 6,000 feet below the surface. The department will track the progress of the dive on a live, interactive public web site titled Fire in the Ice maintained by the national laboratory. Students will be able to ask questions of Energy Department scientists working with the project and hear audio reports sent by satellite from the dive site. Results of the dives will be posted at the end of each day. Methane hydrates are an intriguing geologic phenomenon. Created by a combination of cold temperatures and high pressures, they are ice crystals that encase molecules of methane, or natural gas. When the ice melts, it can release as much as 160 times in volume in natural gas. Hydrates are known to exist on the ocean floor and beneath the Arctic tundra. Recent studies have estimated that hydrate formations in the United States could hold as much as 200,000 trillion cubic feet of natural gas -- dwarfing the estimated 1,400 trillion cubic feet of conventional recoverable gas resources and reserves in the United States. The hydrate dives are part of a 17-day ocean expedition by the ALVIN conducted through the Center for Marine Science and the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. The ALVIN is a highly-instrumented mini-submarine operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. It has been used for such diverse missions as the search for the RMS Titanic to the study of the movement of the earth's tectonic plates to the examination of whale skeletons. Leading the hydrate dives will be Dr. Ian MacDonald, Associate Research Scientist with the Geochemical and Environmental Research Group of Texas A&M University. He is an internationally recognized expert on the biology and geology of marine oil seeps. The Energy Department's scientist on site will be Thomas Mroz, who was part of the team that developed the Energy Department's original gas hydrate research efforts in the 1980s. - End of Techline - For more information, contact: |