Studies by Andrew Fisher and colleagues have
shown that seamounts provide conduits through which enormous quantities
of water flow between the ocean and the rocks beneath the seafloor.
Credit: Courtesy of Nicolle Rager
Vast quantities of ocean water circulate
through the seafloor, flowing through the volcanic rock of the upper
oceanic crust. A new study by scientists at UC Santa Cruz, published
June 26 in Nature Communications, explains what drives this global process and how the flow is sustained.
About 25 percent of the heat that flows out of the Earth's interior
is transferred to the oceans through this process, according to Andrew
Fisher, professor of Earth and planetary sciences at UC Santa Cruz and
coauthor of the study. Much of the fluid flow and heat transfer occurs
through thousands of extinct underwater volcanoes (called seamounts) and
other locations where porous volcanic rock is exposed at the seafloor.
Fisher led an international team of scientists that in the early
2000s discovered the first field site where this process could be
tracked from fluid inflow to outflow, in the northeastern Pacific Ocean.
In a 2003 paper published in Nature, Fisher and others
reported that bottom seawater entered into one seamount, traveled
horizontally through the crust, gaining heat and reacting with crustal
rocks, then discharged into the ocean through another seamount more than
50 kilometers away.
'Ever since we discovered a place where these processes occur, we
have been trying to understand what drives the fluid flow, what it looks
like, and what determines the flow direction,' Fisher said.
For the new study, first author Dustin Winslow, a UCSC Ph.D.
candidate who graduated this month, developed the first
three-dimensional computer models showing how the process works. The
models reveal a 'hydrothermal siphon' driven by heat loss from deep in
the Earth and the flow of cold seawater down into the crust and of
warmed water up out of the crust.
'Dustin's models provide the best, most realistic view of these
systems to date, opening a window into a hidden realm of water, rock,
and life,' Fisher said.
The models show that water tends to enter the crust ('recharge')
through seamounts where fluid flow is easiest due to favorable rock
properties and larger seamount size. Water tends to discharge where
fluid flow is more difficult due to less favorable rock properties or
smaller seamount size. This finding is consistent with field
observations suggesting that smaller seamounts are favored as sites of
hydrothermal discharge.
'This modeling result was surprising initially, and we had to run
many simulations to convince ourselves that it made sense,' Winslow
said. 'We also found that models set up to flow in the opposite
direction would spontaneously flip so that discharge occurred through
less transmissive seamounts. This seems to be fundamental to explaining
how these systems are sustained.'
Winslow's project was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation
through a graduate fellowship and as part of the Center for Dark Energy
Biosphere Investigations (C-DEBI). UCSC is a partner in C-DEBI, which is
headquartered at the University of Southern California.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
University of California - Santa Cruz. The original item was written by Tim Stephens.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.