| FROM: Sandra Hines University of Washington 206-543-2580 shines@u.washington.edu AND: Cindy Clark Scripps Institution of Oceanography 858-534-1294 cclark@ucsd.edu |
AND: Dennis Meredith Duke University 919-681-8054 dennis@dukenews.edu AND: Cheryl Dybas National Science Foundation 703-292-8070 cdybas@nsf.gov |
A team of scientists led by Deborah Kelley from the University of Washington, Donna Blackman from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Jeff Karson of Duke University conducted the National Science Foundation-supported expedition.
"We thought that we had seen the entire spectrum of hydrothermal activity on the seafloor, but this major discovery reminds us that the ocean still has much to reveal, "says Margaret Leinen, NSF assistant director for geosciences.
"These structures, which tower 180 feet above the seafloor, are the largest hydrothermal chimneys of their kind ever observed," said Deborah Kelley, a University of Washington geologist and co-principal investigator on the cruise.
Most previously studied vents are less than 80 feet high, the tallest being a 135-foot vent dubbed Godzilla, on the seafloor off the Washington state coast. It toppled in half a few years ago.
"If this vent field was on land, it would be a national park," Duke University structural geologist Jeff Karson said of the new find. Karson, a second co-principal investigator, joined Kelley in the submersible Alvin on a dive to the site on Dec. 5.
Perhaps most surprising is that the venting structures are composed of carbonate minerals and silica, in contrast to most other mid-ocean ridge hot spring deposits, which are formed by iron and sulfur-based minerals. The low-temperature hydrothermal fluids may have unusual chemistries because they emanate from mantle rocks.
![]() The top of this 18-story-tall chimney in the Lost City hydrothermal vent field is nearly 30 feet in diameter and is actively venting fluids. (Photo credit: University of Washington)
| Nothing like this submarine hydrothermal
field has ever been previously observed, say the scientists.
These events are unique, they believe, because they rest on
one-million-year-old ocean crust formed tens of kilometers
beneath the seafloor, and because of their incredible size.
Dense macrofaunal communities such as clams, shrimps,
mussels, and tube worms, which typify most other mid-ocean
ridge hydrothermal environments, appear to be absent in this
field. The Lost City Field was discovered unexpectedly while
studying geological and hydrothermal processes that built an
unusually tall, 12,000-foot-mountain at this site. In this
area, deep mantle rocks called serpentinized peridotites, and
rocks crystallized in subseafloor magma chambers, have been
uplifted several miles from beneath the seafloor along large
faults that expose them at the surface of the mountain. "As so often happens, we were pursuing one set of questions concerning building of the mountain and we stumbled onto a very important new discovery," said Donna Blackman, a geophysicist from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and chief scientist of the expedition. She added that "the venting towers are very spectacular and, although they bring up a whole new set of questions, we will learn about the evolution of the mountain itself as we study the vents carefully in the future."
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| Observations using the
submersible Alvin and deep-towed vehicle Argo, operated by
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, show that the field
hosts numerous active and inactive hydrothermal vents. The
steep-sided, 180-foot-tall deposits are composed of multiple
spires that reach 30 feet in width at their tops. They are
commonly capped by white, feathery hydrothermal precipitates.
The tops and sides of the massive edifices are awash in
fluids that reach temperatures up to 160 degrees. From the sides of the structures, abundant arrays of delicate, white flanges emerge. Similar to cave deposits, complex, intergrown stalagmites rise several meters above the flange roofs. Underneath the flanges, trapped pools of warm fluid support dense mats of microbial communities that wave within the rising fluids. Downslope, hundreds of overlapping flanges form hydrothermal deposits reminiscent of hot spring deposits in Yellowstone National Park. During the Alvin dive, expedition leader Patrick Hickey collected rocks, fluids, and biological samples for shore-based analyses. "By studying such environments, we may learn about ancient hydrothermal systems and the life that they support," suggested Kelley.
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![]() Cone-shaped pinnacles, about 20 feet can be seen, rise from a 160-foot-tall edifice in the Lost City hydrothermal vent field. White-colored chimneys are actively venting fluids in contrast to the beige-colored edifices that are no longer venting. (Photo credit: University of Washington)
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The three principal scientists may be contacted aboard ship until Sat.
Dec.16. (Note: e-mail is only sent and received three times a day.)
Donna Blackman
Debbie Kelley
Jeff Karson
Expedition web site:
http://earthguide.ucsd.edu/mar