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Geology Picture of the Week, May 23-30, 2004: Undersea asphalt volcanoes
National Public Radio ^ | May 14, 2004 | NPR

Posted on 05/27/2004 9:25:58 AM PDT by cogitator

Scientists exploring the deep sea in the Gulf of Mexico have discovered seeps that resemble a paved road. Seeps are places where oil and other hydrocarbons bubble up from under the seabed. But these seeps, discovered by researchers with Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi, are covered in asphalt.

The seeps were found along salt domes that lie about two miles down in the southern Gulf of Mexico. Deep sea cameras revealed about 20 salt domes that had collapsed or broken apart. Along the edges were large patches of asphalt, or hardened tar. Scientists photographed them and took samples; they say the material is similar to asphalt pavement, and was probably squeezed out of the seabed like lava.

Oil seeps have been found in most of the world's oceans, but none with hardened material like this, according to a paper in this week's issue of the journal Science. The scientists also found communities of tube worms, mussels, clams and shrimp living on or near the asphalt. These animals are similar to ones living near deep sea vents, and live off of the chemicals emitted from the vents and seeps.

The asphalt deposits are the result of a violent expulsion of hydrocarbons, and indicate untapped deep-water oil reserves. Scientists had thought the region was relatively stable, but this discovery of underwater "volcanoes" shows "how much more there is to learn about the deep sea," says Texas A&M researcher Ian MacDonald. "The abundance of animal life is more proof of the adaptability of marine organisms."


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Education; Outdoors; Science
KEYWORDS: asphalt; fresh; underwater; volcanoes
I heard about this on the local radio (not NPR). Here's another article with one more picture:

Asphalt flows from deepsea volcanoes

PDF of Science article:

Asphalt volcanism and chemosynthetic life in the Campeche Knolls, Gulf of Mexico (more pictures on page 3)

1 posted on 05/27/2004 9:26:00 AM PDT by cogitator
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To: 2Trievers; headsonpikes; Pokey78; Lil'freeper; epsjr; sauropod; kayak; Miss Marple; CPT Clay; ...

** ping **


2 posted on 05/27/2004 9:27:09 AM PDT by cogitator
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To: cogitator
WOW!

The oceans and the adaptability of life continues to amaze me every single day.

3 posted on 05/27/2004 9:47:36 AM PDT by Hunble
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To: cogitator

That gives a whole new meaning to Joni Mitchell's old song, "they paved paradise and put up a parking lot..."

}:-)4


4 posted on 05/27/2004 9:49:27 AM PDT by Moose4 (Yes, it's just an excuse for me to post more pictures of my cats. Deal with it.)
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To: cogitator
The abundance of animal life is more proof of the adaptability of marine organisms."

Too bad the Caribou in Alaska are not near as hardy as marine organisms.

ANWR < / sarcasm >

5 posted on 05/27/2004 9:53:51 AM PDT by JZoback
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To: cogitator
Scientists exploring the deep sea in the Gulf of Mexico have discovered seeps that resemble a paved road.

Oh hell, so that's where the road crew from the I-75/LBJ Freeway construction project ended up. They'd go anywhere to avoid finishing the 'High Five' in Dallas.

6 posted on 05/27/2004 2:49:18 PM PDT by xJones (quilty)
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To: cogitator
Here's a little more information about these asphalt deposits from Science News in their May 15 issue: http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20040515/fob2.asp

Underwater Pavement: Asphalt deposits cover parts of Gulf of Mexico

Sid Perkins

During explorations of the seafloor in the southern Gulf of Mexico late last year, researchers discovered peculiar lavalike flows of asphalt that had gushed down the slopes of a steep undersea knoll. The now-solid swaths of hydrocarbon-based material are home to a thriving ecosystem, the scientists have found.

a4890_1169.jpg

LIFE ON THE ROAD. Tubeworms grow from cracks in this lavalike asphalt deposit on a submerged knoll in the southern Gulf of Mexico.
Science

In the first stage of research, the multinational team of scientists used sonar to map a 60-kilometer-by-90-km patch of ocean bottom about 200 km west of the Yucatán. Within that area lie the Campeche Knolls, 22 elongated hills that stand anywhere from 450 meters to 800 m above the surrounding abyssal plain. Slopes of the knolls can measure as much as 12°, says Ian R. MacDonald, an oceanographer at Texas A&M University in Corpus Christi.

The sonar maps revealed that the crests and flanks of nine of the undersea knolls were riddled with fractures and covered with blocks of slumped material.

Satellite images of the region's ocean surface often show small slicks of oil floating directly over the knolls. When MacDonald and his colleagues used remotely controlled undersea cameras to investigate, the scientists spotted extensive deposits of solidified asphalt emanating from a fault near one knoll's crest. One 15-m-wide deposit there, consisting of several layers, chronicles a series of eruptions, says MacDonald. The researchers describe their find in the May 14 Science.

Asphalt samples retrieved from the seafloor didn't contain any oil and held only traces of hydrocarbon gases. A rind on the deposits, as well as a certain type of fracturing throughout the material, suggests the erupting asphalt flowed readily but quickly cooled when it hit the 4°C water of the Gulf's depths. To have flowed easily, the asphalt either must have erupted at temperatures above 200°C or contained low-viscosity hydrocarbons that have since dispersed, says MacDonald.

Thick mats of microbes blanket some areas of the asphalt deposits. In other spots, ghostly white crabs skitter among clusters of tubeworms and mussels. DNA analyses ought to reveal whether these asphalt-dwelling organisms are genetically distinct from similar creatures found elsewhere in the Gulf's waters, says MacDonald.

In many regions of the world, hydrocarbons slowly seep from the ocean floor, says biologist Cindy L. Van Dover of the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va. The Campeche Knolls site, however, is the "first site I've seen where the hydrocarbons formed a hard surface" that could be colonized by organisms, she notes.

The researchers suggest that microbes at the base of the ecosystem's food chain are probably feeding either on hydrocarbons in some of the asphalt or on small amounts of dissolved hydrocarbons or sulfides still emerging from the ocean floor.

The species living on the Campeche Knolls asphalt deposits are a "particularly cool twist on chemosynthetic life," says Charles Paull of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, Calif. The frigid temperatures at the site stand in marked contrast to the hellish conditions of the ecosystems thriving near the hydrothermal vents typically associated with midocean ridges.

7 posted on 05/27/2004 7:57:22 PM PDT by StopGlobalWhining (If Bush loses, Al Queda wins! - Cheney-Rumsfeld in '08)
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