Author
Listed:
- C. R. German
(Southampton Oceanography Centre)
- E. T. Baker
(NOAA-Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory)
- C. Mevel
(CNRS-Laboratoire de Petrologie, Université Pierre et Marie Curie)
- K. Tamaki
(Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo)
- the FUJI Science Team
(Ecole et Observatoire de Physique du Globe de Strasbourg
Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo
Laboratoire d'Etudes en Geophysique et Oceanographie Spatiales
Dept of Geological Sciences)
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.
Suggested Citation
C. R. German & E. T. Baker & C. Mevel & K. Tamaki & the FUJI Science Team, 1998.
"Hydrothermal activity along the southwest Indian ridge,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 395(6701), pages 490-493, October.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:395:y:1998:i:6701:d:10.1038_26730
DOI: 10.1038/26730
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