“…In quiescent environments where hydrate has sufficient time to equilibrate with water (Ebinuma et al, ; Hyodo et al, ; Kneafsey et al, ), such compositional details have been shown to diminish over time through diffusion in order to establish hydrate‐water equilibrium (Circone et al, ). However, in environments where hydrate formation is being fed by active gaseous methane flow, such as that of hydrated‐crusted gas bubble plumes (Wang et al, ), seeps, and seafloor outcrops (Bünz et al, ; Haeckel et al, ; Linke et al, ; Macelloni et al, ; Plaza‐Faverola et al, , , Riedel et al, ; Suess et al, ; Smith et al, ), and gas chimneys (Andreassen et al, ; Haeckel et al, ; Liu & Flemings, ), the compositional gradient in the hydrate is likely sustained by the nonequilibrium nature of interfacial hydrate formation. While in situ measurements of hydrate compositions in these environments are less accessible, our results suggest that xenon is a good laboratory analog to methane in order to understand how hydrate formers transport through these geologic multiphase settings.…”