An international team of scientists investigated the aftermath of a magnitude 8.1 earthquake that took place in the Northern Arabian Sea in 1945.
They postulated that this event caused the release of about 7.4 million cubic meters methane, into the ocean. In 2007, during a research cruise off the coast of Pakistan, the scientists obtained several sediment cores.
One of these cores contained methane hydrates, a solid ice-like structure of methane and water, just 1.6 meters below the sea floor. Investigations of these cores enabled the scientists to relate the 1945 earthquake to the concomitant release of methane, researchers said.
During their expedition with the research vessel METEOR, the researchers extracted sediment core samples, which they closely investigated in the lab.
"First, we examined the pore water, which is the water between sediment grains in the core," said first author Dr David Fischer.
"At two separate coring sites, one with hydrates the other without, we found unusual pore water sulfate profiles indicating a substantial increase in upward methane flux in the recent past," said Fischer.
"Both the sulfate and the barite analyses indicated that in the recent past, something must have amplified the methane flux from below. We started going through the literature and found that a major earthquake had occurred close-by in 1945," said Fischer.
"Based on several indicators, we postulated that the earthquake led to a fracturing of the sediments, releasing the gas that had been trapped below the hydrates into the ocean," said Fischer.
"There are probably even more sites in the area that had been affected by the earthquake," said scientists.
The study was published in Nature Geoscience.
