“…Methane emissions from ocean floors are a global phenomenon often recognized by the presence of seafloor morphologies (e.g., pockmarks and mounds) and acoustic flares, which indicate rising gas bubbles in the water column [e.g., King and Maclean, 1970]. Pockmark fields are frequently documented in gas hydrate provinces [e.g., Vogt et al, 1994;Riedel et al, 2002;Hovland et al, 2005;Gay et al, 2006;Skarke et al, 2014] as well as from shallow seafloors (<200 m) outside the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) [e.g., Hasiotis et al, 1996;Judd et al, 2002;García-García et al, 2006;Canet et al, 2010;Riboulot et al, 2014]. The geological settings in which seepage has been identified vary from passive margins [e.g., Berndt et al, 2005], active pull-apart basins [e.g., Canet et al, 2010], subduction margins [e.g., Barnes et al, 2010], epicontinental seas [e.g., Chand et al, 2012], and mixed compressional and shear deformation regimes [e.g., Plaza-Faverola et al, 2014].…”