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Three-dimensional structure of fluid conduits sustaining an active deep marine cold seep

January 1, 2007

Cold seeps in deep marine settings emit fluids to the overlying ocean and are often associated with such seafloor flux indicators as chemosynthetic biota, pockmarks, and authigenic carbonate rocks. Despite evidence for spatiotemporal variability in the rate, locus, and composition of cold seep fluid emissions, the shallow subseafloor plumbing systems have never been clearly imaged in three dimensions. Using a novel, high-resolution approach, we produce the first three-dimensional image of possible fluid conduits beneath a cold seep at a study site within the Blake Ridge gas hydrate province. Complex, dendritic features diverge upward toward the seafloor from feeder conduits at depth and could potentially draw flow laterally by up to 103 m from the known seafloor seep, a pattern similar to that suggested for some hydrothermal vents. The biodiversity, community structure, and succession dynamics of chemosynthetic communities at cold seeps may largely reflect these complexities of subseafloor fluid flow.

Publication Year 2007
Title Three-dimensional structure of fluid conduits sustaining an active deep marine cold seep
DOI 10.1029/2006GL028859
Authors M.J. Hornbach, C. Ruppel, C.L. Van Dover
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geophysical Research Letters
Index ID 70029951
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coastal and Marine Geology Program; Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center