Carbon and oxygen isotope composition of carbonate in bulk sediment in the southwest Taiwan Basin, South China Sea: Methane hydrate decomposition history and its link to mud volcano eruption

2018 
Abstract Anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) coupled with sulfate reduction (SR) generates authigenic carbonate which has the unique carbon and oxygen isotope composition in sulfate methane transition zone (SMTZ). The carbon and oxygen isotope composition of carbonate in sediments, which can be used to revel the variable methane flux, is affected by the percentage of AOM-driven carbonate in sediments. To investigate the methane hydrate decomposition history in the southwest Taiwan Basin, we analyzed a 13 m-long sediment core for grain size, carbonate and elemental carbon contents and stable carbon and oxygen isotopes composition of carbonate (δ 13 C carb and δ 18 O carb ). The AMS 14 C dating results and carbonate content reveal that a turbidity current occurred at around 14 ka B.P., which reversed sediment accumulation between 455 and 885 cm in depth. Combining the chronological framework and δ 13 C carb values, we identified that the methane hydrate decomposition scale began to decrease at 14 ka B.P. Moreover, we discovered that three transiently enhanced methane hydrate decomposition events occurred from then on. Although the δ 13 C carb and δ 18 O carb variability are as expected, the low δ 18 O carb values are inconsistent with the previous theory which favors 18 O-enriched in AOM-driven authigenic carbonate. Thus, we suggest that a large amount of 18 O-depleted water which originally migrated from southwest Taiwan island was injected into surface sediment along with the eruption of mud volcanos. As the terminal electron accepter of AOM-SR reaction, the exogenous 18 O-depleted water leads its special oxygen isotope to be inherited by the authigenic AOM-driven carbonate. The proposed theory provides new insights on the authigenic carbonate in methane hydrate area and the association between methane hydrates and mud volcanoes.
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