This study evaluated natural gas hydrates recovered from three different wells (J13R, J07RB, and J23R) at the Umitaka Spur in the Joetsu Basin, via Raman spectroscopy. The hydrates in two of the samples (J13R-13P and J07RB-5P) were of the particle displacement type, whereas sample J23R-3P displayed hydrates of the massive type. The hydrate crystals in all three samples contained a structure-I (sI) hydrate that primarily captures methane (CH 4) molecules with ethane (C 2 H 6), carbon dioxide (CO 2), and/or hydrogen sulfide (H 2 S), which were observable using powder X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy techniques. In the massive type J23R-3P sample, two hydrate crystals with different textures were found to coexist, with one displaying an icy appearance and the other a columnar shape. Interestingly, the icy J23R-3P crystals were sI hydrates containing mostly CH 4 with C 2 H 6 , CO 2 , and H 2 S, whereas the columnar J23R-3P crystals were sI CH 4 hydrates containing few other guest molecules. The coexistence of two different hydrates was not observed in the nodule type sediment (J13R-13P and J07RB-5P). Isotopic results suggested that the CH 4 molecules in the icy and columnar J23R-3P crystals originated from different CH 4 sources. Different sI crystals coexisting in the same sample would be because of high CH 4 flux, a known feature in the Umitaka Spur.