| Literature DB >> 11541731 |
J R Delaney1, D S Kelley, M D Lilley, D A Butterfield, J A Baross, W S Wilcock, R W Embley, M Summit.
Abstract
Seafloor diking-eruptive events represent the irreducible, quantum events of upper oceanic crustal accretion. They record events by which a large portion of the oceanic crust has formed through geological history. Since 1993, the U.S. Navy's real-time Sound Surveillance System has allowed location of ongoing acoustic signatures of dike emplacement and basalt eruptions at ridge crests in the northeast Pacific. These diking-eruptive events trigger a sequence of related, rapidly evolving physical, chemical, and biological processes. Magmatic volatiles released during these events may provide nutrients for communities of subsea-floor microorganisms, some of which thrive in high-temperature anaerobic environments. Many of the organisms identified from these systems are Archaea. If microorganisms can thrive in the water-saturated pores and cracks within deep, volcanically active portions of our planet, other hydrothermally active planets may harbor similar life forms.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 11541731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728