Chamorro Vent Discovery: 2016 Deepwater Exploration of the Marianas

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0 بار بازدید - 8 سال پیش - Hydrothermal vents are most commonly
Hydrothermal vents are most commonly found near areas that are volcanically or tectonically active. So when scientists using NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer set out to explore Chamorro Seamount, which had no known historic eruptions, they weren't expecting to find vent communities...but they did. Seen at a depth of ~980 meters (3,215 feet), the hydrothermal vents on the outer southeast slope of the seamount's summit crater were indeed an unexpected, and exciting, discovery.

Hydrothermal vents occur when super-heated water comes out of a fissure of Earth's surface. The geothermally heated water inside the chimney can reach temperatures of several hundred degrees Celsius, while the water surrounding the vent is about two degrees Celsius in the deep sea. As soon as the hot fluid comes in contact with ambient sea water, it drastically drops in temperature and hydrothermal mixing occurs.

The hot fluids at vents contain minerals such as hydrogen sulfide that provide food for bacteria through a process known as chemosynthesis. Chemosynthetic bacteria are at the heart of deep-sea communities, sustaining life in absolute darkness, where sunlight does not penetrate.

The chimney mounds at Chammoro were small (one to two meters high), but a temperature measurement taken at one chimney was as high as 31.14°C. The dominant fauna throughout the dive was stylasterid corals (a type of hydrocoral) and animals known to be found in common association with vents, such as the Alvinoconcha snails and alvinocaridid shrimp seen in the video. Other fauna documented during the dive included unusual amphipods, rare blind (polychelid) lobsters, two species of unidentified demosponges, cutthroat eels and rattails, and a variety of fish swimming near the vents.

This was Dive 7 on the third leg of an expedition to investigate and document deepwater environments in and around the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands and the Marianas Trench Marine National Monument. The expedition is part of the three-year Campaign to Address the Pacific monument Science, Technology, and Ocean NEeds (CAPSTONE), an effort to explore high-priority unknown areas in the Pacific marine national monuments.

Video courtesy of the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, 2016 Deepwater Exploration of the Marianas.

Learn more about the expedition: http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/okeanos...

Watch live video from expedition dives until July 10, 2016: http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/okeanos...
8 سال پیش در تاریخ 1395/04/08 منتشر شده است.
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