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Gas Hydrates articles collection from GEO ExPro

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Hydrates are found in permafrost, on continental shelves and in the wider universe where they play an important role during the formation of planets. This collection of articles by Lasse Amundsen and Martin Landrø, and guest editors, provide essential insights into the science of these enigmatic resources.
Hydrates articles collection from GEO ExPro

Gas Hydrates - Part I: Burning Ice - Lasse Amundsen and Martin Landrø

Scientists have known and studied natural gas hydrates for decades. Vast deposits of hydrates have been found, both in the permafrost and the continental shelves of the oceans of the world. Natural gas hydrates also exist in the universe. Hydrates have played an important role during formation of planets, and our atmosphere and hydrosphere. Want to know more? Read on!
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2012/12/gas-hydrates-part-i-burning-ice

Gas Hydrates - Part II: Rock Physics, an Introduction - Lasse Amundsen and Martin Landrø

Most oceanic gas hydrates are mapped using seismic data. How much do key seismic parameters vary from a hydrate rock to a water-saturated rock? Should the hydrate be considered as part of pore fluid fill or a part of the rock itself? To answer such questions, we need to understand the rock physics of sediments containing gas hydrates.
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2012/12/gas-hydrates-part-ii-rock-physics-an-introduction

Gas Hydrates - Part III: Rock Physics Hydrate Experiments - Lasse Amundsen and Martin Landrø

“In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But in poetry, it’s the exact opposite.” - Paul Dirac, Physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics, 1933
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2013/02/gas-hydrates-part-iii-rock-physics-hydrate-experiments

Gas Hydrates Part IV: Where Are Gas Hydrates Found? - Lasse Amundsen, Martin Landrø and Thomas Reichel

The need for energy is driving much of the current natural gas hydrate research.
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2013/05/gas-hydrates-part-iv-where-are-gas-hydrates-found

Gas Hydrates - Part V: The Resource Potential - Lasse Amundsen, Thomas Reichel (Statoil) and Martin Landrø (NTNU Trondheim).

The gas hydrate resource is a function of geology, technology, policy, and market conditions. As we have seen, the commercial resource and recovery potential of gas hydrate strongly depends on the type of gas hydrate accumulation. In Part V of our series on gas hydrates, we discuss the resource potential.
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2015/02/gas-hydrates-part-v-the-resource-potential

Gas Hydrates - Part VI - Martin Landrø (NTNU Trondheim), Jürgen Mienert (UIT) and Lasse Amundsen (Statoil)

Hydrates in the Arctic (I)
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2015/05/gas-hydrates-part-vi

Gas Hydrates - Part VII - Jürgen Mienert (UIT), Martin Landrø (NTNU Trondheim) and Lasse Amundsen (Statoil)

Hydrates in the Arctic (II)
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2015/05/gas-hydrates-part-vii

Gas Hydrates - Part VIII - Lasse Amundsen, Statoil, and Martin Landrø, NTNU Trondheim

Hydrates in Outer Space (1)
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2015/06/gas-hydrates-part-viii

Gas Hydrates Part IX - Hydrates in Outer Space (2) - Lasse Amundsen, Statoil, and Martin Landrø, NTNU Trondheim

Previously (Part VIII) we discussed the possibilities of gas hydrates on Mars. Here, we look at such possibilities elsewhere in outer space.
http://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2015/10/gas-hydrates-part-ix-hydrates-in-outer-space-2