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Hydrothermal Vent Geology and Biology at Earth’s Fastest Spreading Rates

Authors :
John E. Lupton
Richard Hey
Robert C. Vrijenhoek
David A. Butterfield
Gary J. Massoth
Peter A. Rona
Source :
Marine Geophysical Researches. 27:137-153
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2006.

Abstract

Earth’s fastest present seafloor spreading occurs along the East Pacific Rise near 31°–32° S. Two of the major hydrothermal plume areas discovered during a 1998 multidisciplinary geophysical/hydrothermal investigation of these mid-ocean ridge axes were explored during a 1999 Alvin expedition. Both occur in recently eruptive areas where shallow collapse structures mark the neovolcanic axis. The 31° S vent area occurs in a broad linear zone of collapses and fractures coalescing into an axial summit trough. The 32° S vent area has been volcanically repaved by a more recent eruption, with non-linear collapses that have not yet coalesced. Both sites occur in highly inflated areas, near local inflation peaks, which is the best segment-scale predictor of hydrothermal activity at these superfast spreading rates (150 mm/yr).

Details

ISSN :
15730581 and 00253235
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine Geophysical Researches
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0e58de13ff985453c1739172faca558d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11001-005-1887-x