Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Exploration of the deep Gulf of Mexico slope using DSV Alvin: Site selection and geologic character

May 28, 2007

The Gulf of Mexico is well known for its hydrocarbon seeps, associated chemosynthetic communities, and gas hydrates. However, most direct observations and samplings of seep sites have been concentrated above water depths of approximately 3000 ft (1000 m) because of the scarcity of deep diving manned submersibles. In the summer of 2006, Minerals Management Service (MMS) and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) supported 24 days of DSV Alvin dives on the deep continental slope. Site selection for these dives was accomplished through surface reflectivity analysis of the MMS slope-wide 3D seismic database followed by a photo reconnaissance cruise. From 80 potential sites, 20 were studied by photo reconnaissance from which 10 sites were selected for Alvin dives. Four sites, found in Atwater Valley Lease Area, Block 340 (AT 340), Green Canyon Lease Area, Block 852 (GC 852), Alaminos Canyon Lease Area, Block 601 (AC 601), and Alaminos Canyon Lease Area, Block 818 (AC 818) had impressive and diverse chemosynthetic communities as well as well-defined fluid-gas expulsion geology. In addition to chemosynthetic communities, GC 852 had abundant hard and soft corals seated on substrates of exposed authigenic carbonate boulders. During the two dives at this site the water depths (WD) were approximately 4760 ft (1450 m), and the currents were estimated to be 1-1.5 kts ( approximately 50-80 cm/s). At AC 601 (WD approximately 7675 ft (2340 m)), a brine lake that was 13 ft (4 m) deep and 590 ft (180 m) wide with a salinity of approximately 90 per mil (parts per thousand) was investigated and sampled. White "flocs" floating in the brine and concentrated at the "shoreline" were found to be barite. No visible animal life was observed in the brine, but moribund fauna were found both in the lake and at the shoreline. Isolated living communities of mussels and urchins were found on the lake margins. Geochemically, the concentration of methane in the water column above the lake exceeded all their Alvin dive sites by one order of magnitude. Methane was supersaturated all the way to the surface, suggesting the site could be a source of methane to the atmosphere.

Publication Year 2007
Title Exploration of the deep Gulf of Mexico slope using DSV Alvin: Site selection and geologic character
Authors Harry H. Roberts, C.R. Fisher, J.M. Brooks, Bernie Bernard, R.S. Carney, Erik E. Cordes, William Shedd, Jesse Hunt, Samantha B. Joye, Ian R. MacDonald, Cheryl Morrison
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70210277
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Leetown Science Center