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Hot Stuff in the Deep Sea

Posted by Will Ramos on Tuesday, November 17th, 2009 at 8:27 am
Filed under: Discovery,News & Resources
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Collecting vent mussels and crabs using one of Alvin's manipulators, which can be seen on the left. (Credit: PlanetEarth Online)

Collecting vent mussels and crabs using one of Alvin's manipulators, which can be seen on the left. (Credit: PlanetEarth Online)

How do fossils form around hydrothermal vents? Crispin Little describes how his team found out by making their own.

(From PlanetEarth Online) — Research on the deep-sea floor is a serious undertaking. It requires specialised equipment like the famous manned submersible Alvin and very expensive oceanographic vessels capable of operating far from land for a long time. Potential problems are not only technical – ship’s engines malfunctioning or submersible cables tangling, for example. They can also be due to factors beyond anyone’s control; bad weather has scuppered many a well-planned research cruise.

Working on the mid-ocean ridges is even harder, because these are among the most geologically active areas on the planet. Here new ocean crust is being formed as lava erupts onto the sea floor, accompanied by strong earthquakes. (See Planet Earth Autumn 2009, p28.) Not only that, but the ridges are also sites of intense hydrothermal activity, with 370°C, highly acidic vent fluids gushing out of towering mineral chimneys on the sea floor.

This challenging environment was the setting for our project to study fossilisation in deep-sea hydrothermal vents. Indeed, these challenges were confirmed when we lost an entire set of experimental devices to a major sea-floor volcanic eruption early on in the experiment.

The author extracting a pair of fossilisation cages from Alvin's collection basket, recovered from 2.5km down on the sea floor. (Credit PlanetEarth Online)

The author extracting a pair of fossilisation cages from Alvin's collection basket, recovered from 2.5km down on the sea floor. (Credit PlanetEarth Online)

Why are we interested in fossilisation at deep-sea hydrothermal vents? The aim of the study was to better understand the evolutionary history of the extraordinary communities of animals that live only at hydrothermal vents. First discovered in 1979 on the Galapagos Rise, these communities have radically changed our view of the diversity of life in the deep sea, partly because their primary energy source is not sunlight, but geochemical energy from hot rocks. The most important compound in vent fluid is hydrogen sulphide, and many vent animals, including giant vestimentiferan tube worms, vent mussels and clams, depend for food on symbiotic bacteria that live by oxidising this sulphide.

This dependence on geochemical rather than solar energy may have shielded vent communities from major environmental events, like the mass extinctions and global climate change that affected contemporary photosynthesis-based ecosystems. Thus, the evolutionary history of vent fauna is probably very different from that of other marine biotas.

The only direct evidence for this history comes from the fossil record. But at present this is sparse, with only 25 examples known from the past 550 million years, and there are fundamental questions about why this is. For example, why do some ancient vent deposits contain fossils, while others in the same state of preservation don’t? There are also significant groups of animals, like crabs and shrimps, that are abundant at modern vents, but which do not appear in the vent fossil record. Why should this be? Is it a case of imperfect preservation, or were these groups not present at vent sites in the past?

To find out, we decided to investigate how modern deep-sea hydrothermal vent animals (vestimentiferan and polychaete tube worms, molluscs and crustaceans) become fossilised at vents. To do this we chose an area on the East Pacific Rise, 500 nautical miles south of Mexico, where scientists have studied vents for two decades.

“Presumably our cages are still there, but covered by several metres of basalt!”

The plan was, in partnership with colleagues at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the University of New Hampshire, to use Alvin to deploy specially designed duplicate sets of experimental materials at different hydrothermal vents in three different micro-habitats: the high temperature ‘black smoker’ hydrothermal fluid habitat (up to 370°C), ‘diffuse flow’ sites where hot fluid and seawater mix (at 10-40°C, this is where the majority of animals live), and a control away from active venting (3°C).

We’d then recover these experimental materials at roughly yearly intervals for transport back to the UK and investigation. The experimental devices consisted of identical titanium mesh cages, inside which were wired a variety of control materials and biological substrates: dried vestimentiferan tubes, vent mussel and clam shells, periwinkle shells and tiger prawn carapaces.

We deployed the first fossilisation cages at two vent sites in May 2005. Unfortunately, our hard work came to nothing – the cages (together with all the other research groups’ scientific equipment) were destroyed by a major submarine volcanic event in the area late in 2005, in which an estimated 22 million cubic meters of lava was erupted. Presumably our cages are still there, but covered by several metres of basalt!

We had to restart the project, building new cages and negotiating ship time with our American colleagues. Happily, things have since been a great success. We deployed new sets of fossilisation cages at two different vent sites in November 2006 and December 2007, and recovered them after 373 days and 319 days respectively. The results are very interesting, and go a long way towards answering many of our questions about fossilisation at hydrothermal vents. For example, we now know that fossilisation is very dependent on exactly where the remains are located around the vent.

Hydrothermal vent chimneys are formed mainly out of sulphide minerals. (Credit: PlanetEarth Online)

Hydrothermal vent chimneys are formed mainly out of sulphide minerals. (Credit: PlanetEarth Online)

In our experiment, fossilisation by the growth of sulphide minerals on the biological materials (vestimentiferan tubes, periwinkle, mussel and clam shells) only occurred in the high-temperature areas of the vent sites, or where the vent changed over time – for example, where a diffuse flow vent turned into a black smoker during the experiment. Sulphide mineralisation did not generally occur at diffuse flow sites, although mollusc shells suffered considerable dissolution here, or at control areas away from active venting. The implication is that the fossils found in ancient vent deposits reflect only the parts of those communities that lived at the higher-temperature areas around the vents.

We found that the mollusc shells and tubes acted as simple substrates for the growth of pyrite (iron sulphide) with mineralisation occurring on both shells and tubes. This is exactly what we might expect from the preservation of vent fossils in ancient vent deposits.

We also discovered that the apparent bias towards the fossilisation of worm tubes and mollusc shells is a real phenomenon and reflects how well the various biological substrates resist chemical dissolution in the vent environment, which puts them under high pressure due to depth and exposes them to hot, acidic vent fluid. Thus, no shrimp carapaces remained in any of the ten cages, including those from the control sites away from active venting. Vestimentiferan tubes, by contrast, proved resistant enough to decay to become fossilised.

The organic coating, called the periostracum, of mollusc shells protects them to some extent from dissolution and makes it more likely that shells with thick periostracal layers will get preserved as vent fossils, particularly as the periostracum on its own can be mineralised. The implication is that crustaceans like crabs and shrimps were present at hydrothermal vents in the past, but just did not get preserved.

Our results are consistent with observations from ancient vent sites and let us better interpret the fossil record of vent communities. From this, we now know more of how vent fauna evolved, because we now understand how organisms are preserved in these environments, including the extremely rapid pathway to fossilisation – less than a year.

However, because fossilisation at vent sites happens so quickly, we still don’t fully understand the very early stages of mineralisation of shells and tubes by pyrite, and future experiments should have shorter durations – in the order of a few months. Ship time and submersible seats anyone?


Related Posts:

  • WHOI RFP #07-29-2011 DIRECT FLUX COVARIANCE SENSOR INSTRUMENTS (OOI)
  • WHOI RFP #07-29-2011 FAST RESPONSE HYGROMETER INSTRUMENTS (OOI)
  • Claws! Crabs Are Invading the Shallow Waters of the Southern Ocean
  • Squid Shown To Be Able To Hear
  • Where the Food Is in the Sea—and Why

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