Deep
Sea Hydrothermal Vents
Throughout the oceans of the world
there exist undersea mountain ranges, which have formed as a
result of volcanic activity. These
are formally known as rift zones – where the movement of tectonic
plates is tearing the earth’s crust apart. As
the oceanic crust stretches, it thins and is cracked by giant fissures.
Magma from deep down wells up through these cracks and fissures, rushing
to fill in the gaps created by the rifting of the plates. When the magma
reaches the surface of the oceanic crust, it sometimes oozes out as
lava on the ocean floor, creating new oceanic crust as it cools. In
many places, the magma simply wells up beneath the weakened and thin
areas of crust and fills in the cracks and fissures without ever breaking
the surface. Scientists had suspected that the long chains of undersea
mountains were geologically active zones of the earth’s crust
and had predicted the existence of hydrothermal vents before the first
human ever laid eyes on one. The hydrothermal vents were a direct result
of the volcanic activity happening under all that ocean water, as opposed
to dry land.
A hydrothermal vent is a lot like
an underwater geyser. Sea water seeps down into the cracks and fissures
created by the spreading of the sea floor, sometimes as much as two
or three miles into the earth’s crust. As the water comes into
contact with the veins and channels of superheated, molten magma, the
sea water is superheated. Then the hotter sea water rises to the surface
back through the fissures, carrying with it minerals leached from the
crustal rock below. The superheated seawater then spews out of the holes
in the crust, rising quickly above the colder, denser waters of the
deep ocean. As the hot seawater and the cold seawater meet, the minerals
suspended in the hot water precipitate out (clump together and drop
out) right at the vent opening. This causes an accumulation, or build
up, of the minerals deposited by the mineral rich water into some fantastic
and geologically unique formations that have come to be called chimneys.
One giant smoker discovered in 1991 reached 15 stories high!
Scientists have gone down to explore
and study these deep ocean hydrothermal vents and were completely surprised
to find the areas immediately around the vents teeming with abundant
life. The temperature of the water coming out of the vents has been
measured at the source and it varies from just 68 degrees to as much
as 600 degrees Fahrenheit. At sea level, water reaches the boiling point
at 225 degrees Fahrenheit, but down in the deep ocean around hydrothermal
vents where the water can reach well over the boiling point, the water
coming out of the vents doesn’t boil! What prevents the scalding
hot seawater from boiling (turning into vapor) is the extreme hydrostatic
pressure of all the overlying water. What surprised scientists was that
there was an entire ecosystem, a community of diverse life forms, absolutely
thriving in conditions that were previously thought to be inhospitable
to any kind of life.
Gigantism
A characteristic of many deep ocean
creatures which baffles scientists is the incidence of gigantism
- ocean creatures that exist in shallower waters take on gigantic proportions
when they take up residence down in deep ocean water.
On the bottom of the ocean around deep-sea hydrothermal vents, there
is a profusion of life that thrives on the hydrogen sulfide (H2S) gas
released from the vents. Some of the most impressive of the creatures
that live here are the giant tube-worms. In shallower waters these worms
are common, growing to about the size of your hand. But down in the
deep ocean these creatures thrive in this really hostile environment,
growing to amazing lengths of up to eight feet long. These tube-worms
grow in large clusters around the vents and live inside hard, shell-like
protective tubes that attach to the rocks. They live in a symbiotic
relationship with a type of bacteria that may hold clues as to how life
on earth began billions of years ago. These worms lack mouths, anuses,
intestines and stomachs. Scientists were at a loss to explain how these
tube-worms were getting nutrients to survive and grow. It turns out
their insides are lined with bacteria that oxidize the H2S, turning
it into usable nutrients for the worms. The bacteria, in turn, benefit
from the relationship because the worms deliver blood-containing hemoglobin,
which helps the bacteria to break down the sulfides.
Giant tubeworms that live around
hydrothermal vents on the sea floor. These creatures are about
the size of your hand in shallower waters, but in the ocean's
deep they have been found as big as eight feet long! |
Up until the
discovery of these incredible bacteria (able to withstand the hottest
temperatures of any other living thing on earth), scientists didn't
believe it was possible for anything to survive in the extreme environment
around deep ocean vents (extreme pressure, high temperature, no sunlight).
The discovery of the deep-sea thermal vents and the communities of life
they support has completely changed the way we define life, perhaps
going a long way to explain how life on earth first began.