Short- and long-term movement of mudflows of the Mississippi River Delta Front and their known and potential impacts on oil and gas infrastructure

Author:

Chaytor Jason D.1ORCID,Baldwin Wayne E.1ORCID,Bentley Samuel J.2,Damour Melanie3ORCID,Jones Douglas3,Maloney Jillian4,Miner Michael D.5,Obelcz Jeff6ORCID,Xu Kehui78

Affiliation:

1. US Geological Survey, Woods Hole, USA

2. Department of Geology and Geophysics, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA

3. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, New Orleans, USA

4. Department of Geological Sciences, San Diego State University, San Diego, USA

5. The Water Institute of the Gulf, New Orleans, USA

6. NRC Postdoctoral Fellow, US Naval Research Lab, Stennis Space Center, USA

7. Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA

8. Coastal Studies Institute, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, USA

Abstract

AbstractMudflows on the Mississippi River Delta Front (MRDF) are recognized hazards to oil and gas infrastructure in the shallow (20–300 m water depth) Gulf of Mexico. Preconditioning of the seafloor for failure results from high sedimentation rates coupled with slope over-steepening, under-consolidation and abundant biogenic gas production. Catastrophic failure of production platforms and pipelines due to seafloor displacement during infrequent large hurricanes such as Camille in 1969 and Ivan in 2004, point to cyclical loading of the seafloor by waves as a primary movement trigger. Due to data limitations, the role of smaller storms and background oceanographic processes in driving seafloor movement has remained largely unconstrained but these are thought to contribute to significant seafloor change. With the aid of new high-resolution multibeam mapping and seismic reflection profiling across sections of the MRDF, several moving features within the deforming delta-front environment are investigated and potential hazards to infrastructure installed and adjacent to the region are discussed. Via repeat mapping surveys of selected areas and records of changing shipwreck locations, we highlight significant seafloor displacement across annual to decadal timescales. For example, individual blocks mapped within mudflow gullies adjacent to Southwest Pass show downslope transport of more than 80 m in a single year, while the SS Virginia, a 153 m-long oil tanker sunk in 1942, has been relocated and found to have moved downslope more than 400 m in 14 years, without a major hurricane (>Category 2) passing through the region.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference44 articles.

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2. Baldwin W.E. , Ackerman S.D. , Worley C.R. , Danforth W.W. and Chaytor J.D. 2018. High-resolution geophysical data collected along the Mississippi River Delta front offshore of southeastern Louisiana. US Geological Survey Field Activity 2017-003-FA. US Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/F7X929K6

3. Bea R.G. 1971. How sea floor slides affect offshore structures. Oil and Gas Journal, 88–92.

4. Soil movements and forces developed by wave-induced slides in the Mississippi Delta;Journal of Petroleum Technology,1975

5. The Mississippi River source-to-sink system: Perspectives on tectonic, climatic, and anthropogenic influences, Miocene to Anthropocene;Earth-Science Reviews,2016

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