Publication:
Discovery of Abundant Hydrothermal Venting on the Ultra-Slow Spreading Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean

Thumbnail Image

Date

2003

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Edmonds, H.N., P.J. Michael, E.T. Baker, D.P. Connelly, J.E. Snow, Charles H. Langmuir, H.J.B. Dick, R. Mühe, C.R. German, and D.W. Graham. 2003. Discovery of abundant hydrothermal venting on the ultra-slow spreading Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean. Nature 421: 252-256.

Research Data

Abstract

Submarine hydrothermal venting along mid-ocean ridges is an important contributor to ridge thermal structure(1), and the global distribution of such vents has implications for heat and mass fluxes(2) from the Earth's crust and mantle and for the biogeography of vent-endemic organisms.(3) Previous studies have predicted that the incidence of hydrothermal venting would be extremely low on ultraslow-spreading ridges (ridges with full spreading rates <2 cm yr(-1)-which make up 25 per cent of the global ridge length), and that such vent systems would be hosted in ultramafic in addition to volcanic rocks(4,5). Here we present evidence for active hydrothermal venting on the Gakkel ridge, which is the slowest spreading (0.6-1.3 cm yr(-1)) and least explored mid-ocean ridge. On the basis of water column profiles of light scattering, temperature and manganese concentration along 1,100 km of the rift valley, we identify hydrothermal plumes dispersing from at least nine to twelve discrete vent sites. Our discovery of such abundant venting, and its apparent localization near volcanic centres, requires a reassessment of the geologic conditions that control hydrothermal circulation on ultraslow-spreading ridges.

Description

Keywords

Terms of Use

Metadata Only

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories