--> Abstract: Relation Between Volcanism, Tectonism and Hydrothermal Activity Along the Global Mid-Ocean Ridge System, by Susan E. Humphris; #90086 (2008)
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Relation Between Volcanism, Tectonism and Previous HitHydrothermalNext Hit Activity Along the Global Mid-Ocean Ridge System

Susan E. Humphris
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts ([email protected])

Abstract

Just over 30 years ago, scientists exploring the global mid-ocean ridge system made the spectacular discovery of black smokers—Previous HithydrothermalNext Hit chimneys made of metal sulfide minerals that vigorously discharge hot, particulate-laden fluids into the ocean. These chimneys are the surface manifestation of convection of seawater through the oceanic crust and water-rock reactions that produce hot, Previous HithydrothermalNext Hit fluids that discharge at the seafloor. This Previous HithydrothermalNext Hit circulation process plays an important role in regulating the chemistry of seawater, building mineral deposits, and supporting chemosynthetically-based ecosystems.

Early studies focused on Previous HithydrothermalNext Hit systems on the fast-spreading East Pacific Rise, where shallow magma lenses beneath the ridge crest provide heat to drive convection of seawater through the oceanic crust. Ten years later, studies of the slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge revealed much larger mineral deposits – a surprising result given the lower magma delivery rate and heat availability.

Through the use of different deep-submergence technologies, this talk will explore the characteristics of Previous HitventsNext Hit and their associated communities along the mid-ocean ridge, and the varying relations between volcanic and tectonic processes at sites on ridges of different spreading rates. It will focus in particular on how one active Previous HithydrothermalNext Hit system has constructed a large mineral deposit on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and how recent experiments at that site have shed light on the role tectonics and faulting play in the evolution of long-lived Previous HithydrothermalTop systems.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90086 © 2008 AAPG Foundation Distinguished Lecturer Series 2008-2009