Scientific News Prospecting, production activity and waste handling of minerals Prospecting and output RUTGERS EXPLORER DESCRIBES SEA FLOOR HOT SPRINGS AS TEEMING WITH VALUABLE MINERALS AND MICROBES
RUTGERS EXPLORER DESCRIBES SEA
FLOOR HOT SPRINGS AS TEEMING WITH VALUABLE MINERALS AND MICROBES
With only about 5 percent of the sea floor
explored in detail, a picture is emerging of a vast system of natural undersea
dynamos, fueled by hot springs, that produce not only valuable mineral deposits,
but habitats for unique, heat-loving organisms that can provide materials for
products ranging from detergents to pharmaceuticals.
That is the view of marine geologist and
geophysicist Peter A. Rona of the department of geological sciences and the
Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences at Rutgers, The State University of New
Jersey. Rona, a sea-floor mineral resources consultant to the United Nations,
has spent more than 40 years exploring the oceans. He published an overview of
current work entitled "Resources of the Seafloor" in the international
journal Science Jan. 31.
One of Rona's discoveries is a metal-rich mound
the size and shape of the Houston Astrodome two-and-a-half miles under the
middle of the Atlantic Ocean. "At least 50,000 years in the making, the
mound is composed largely of combinations of the metals copper, iron, zinc, gold
and silver. It was produced by jets of hot, metal-rich sea water," he said.
Rona, who continues to dive and has logged
research expeditions aboard 11 of the world's 13 deep-diving human-occupied
submersible research vessels, said the oceans are no longer considered simply
containers for minerals washed off the continents. "Before the discovery of
plate tectonics the oceans were thought of as big bathtubs," he said.
"Now we know that the earth's crust, most of it under the ocean, is cracked
into plates that move and allow heat and materials from the earth's interior to
escape. As result we know that most of the minerals on the sea floor probably
come from sources under the sea floor."
In fact, Rona said, there is probably as much
water circulating under the sea floor as there is in the oceans themselves.
"Cold, dense sea water seeps for miles downward through the crust. When it
reaches hot layers in the mantle, the water heats and rises with force,
dissolving metals from surrounding rocks and blasting out of the sea floor at
650 degrees Fahrenheit. Often the jets are so dense with minerals we call them 'black
smokers.'"
When the hot jets reach the cold ocean water, the
minerals condense and create structures on the sea floor, said Rona. "Besides
mineral deposits, the hot water and minerals provide habitats and energy for
heat-loving microbes at the bottom of a food chain of newly discovered
deep-ocean life forms. These microbes contain enzymes and bioactive compounds
that can be used in such applications as DNA finger-printing, detergents, food
preservation, oil-drilling and pharmaceutical production."
Rona recently delivered a keynote address at a
commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the United Nations Convention on the
Law of the Sea, which provides a "constitution" for management of the
oceans. "When the Law of the Sea was negotiated, we had little realization
of how far we had to go in terms of retrieving these materials commercially and
no knowledge of the microbes or living systems present," he said.
"Miles down, the ocean is an extremely
hostile environment. Sea water is corrosive; the pressures are huge. It's
analogous to exploring outer space in terms of a hostile and alien
environment," he said. "We are only beginning to discover the immense
richness and diversity of sea floor resources."
The public will have an opportunity to view
Rona's undersea work in a giant-screen film to be released later this year,
entitled "Volcanoes of the Deep Sea," produced by the Stephen Low
Company and Rutgers University. Major funding for the film project is provided
by the National Science Foundation with additional outreach funding provided by
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Ocean Exploration.
###
Professor Rona may be contacted at rona@imcs.rutgers.edu
or by phone at 732-932-6555, extension 241. A photo of Rona may be downloaded at
http://ur.rutgers.edu/medrel/photos/faculty/Peter-Rona.jpg.
Also available are photos of Rona's research, which will be featured in an
upcoming giant-screen film "Volcanoes of the Deep Sea."
Call Alex Low or Jillian Crouse at 514-633-6036
for information about photo lending.
Contact: Bill Haduch, bhaduch@ur.rutgers.edu,
732-932-7084, Rutgers,
the State University of New Jersey
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Rutgers,
the State University of New Jersey
Publishing date: February 11, 2003
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