Letters to Nature: Hydrothermal activity along the southwest Indian Ridge
Letters to Nature: Hydrothermal activity along the southwest Indian Ridge
Twenty years after the discovery of sea-floor hot springs, vast stretches of the global mid-ocean-ridge system remain unexplored for hydrothermal venting. The southwest Indian ridge is a particularly intriguing region, as it is both the slowest-spreading of the main ridges1 and the sole modern migration pathway between the diverse vent fauna of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans2. A recent model postulates that a linear relation exists between vent frequency and spreading rate3 and predicts vent fields to be scarcest along the slowest-spreading ridge sections, thus impeding migration and enhancing faunal diversity2. Here, however, we report evidence of hydrothermal plumes at six locations within two 200-km-long sections of the southwest Indian ridge indicating a higher frequency of venting than expected. These results suggest that fluxes of heat and chemicals from slow-spreading ridges may be greater than previously thought and that faunal migration along the southwest Indian ridge may serve as an important corridor for gene-flow between Pacific and Atlantic hydrothermal fields.
490-493
German, C.R.
cd0eedd5-1377-4182-9c8a-b06aef8c1069
Baker, E.T.
0153c7ce-335a-42ed-ba5a-1f3274263712
Mevel, C.
fb124522-0785-4292-9e7b-95d684666904
Tamaki, K.
430153c9-45cc-4ead-a3c4-0a75a4f01c13
1 October 1998
German, C.R.
cd0eedd5-1377-4182-9c8a-b06aef8c1069
Baker, E.T.
0153c7ce-335a-42ed-ba5a-1f3274263712
Mevel, C.
fb124522-0785-4292-9e7b-95d684666904
Tamaki, K.
430153c9-45cc-4ead-a3c4-0a75a4f01c13
German, C.R., Baker, E.T., Mevel, C. and Tamaki, K.
(1998)
Letters to Nature: Hydrothermal activity along the southwest Indian Ridge.
Nature, 395 (6701), .
(doi:10.1038/26730).
Abstract
Twenty years after the discovery of sea-floor hot springs, vast stretches of the global mid-ocean-ridge system remain unexplored for hydrothermal venting. The southwest Indian ridge is a particularly intriguing region, as it is both the slowest-spreading of the main ridges1 and the sole modern migration pathway between the diverse vent fauna of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans2. A recent model postulates that a linear relation exists between vent frequency and spreading rate3 and predicts vent fields to be scarcest along the slowest-spreading ridge sections, thus impeding migration and enhancing faunal diversity2. Here, however, we report evidence of hydrothermal plumes at six locations within two 200-km-long sections of the southwest Indian ridge indicating a higher frequency of venting than expected. These results suggest that fluxes of heat and chemicals from slow-spreading ridges may be greater than previously thought and that faunal migration along the southwest Indian ridge may serve as an important corridor for gene-flow between Pacific and Atlantic hydrothermal fields.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 1 October 1998
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 50818
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/50818
ISSN: 0028-0836
PURE UUID: 260072ce-e60c-4382-a230-657fe333dabf
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 02 Apr 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:12
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
C.R. German
Author:
E.T. Baker
Author:
C. Mevel
Author:
K. Tamaki
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics