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Judi Lynn

(160,530 posts)
Wed Jun 17, 2015, 05:04 PM Jun 2015

Inside the Mysterious Hot Springs Found Deep Below the Gulf of California

Inside the Mysterious Hot Springs Found Deep Below the Gulf of California



Image credit:

(c) 2015 MBARI

This spring, scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) discovered a field of ocean vents spewing super-heated water into the bottom of the ocean between Baja California and the rest of Mexico. There are plenty of these hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the ocean off the coast of North and Central America, stretching from Canada down to Costa Rica, but this one is different. For one thing, at 12,500 feet below the surface, the Pescadero Basin vents are the deepest. And its structure is one never seen in the northern hemisphere.



Most hydrothermal vents in North America are volcanic in origin and are found on top of basalt rock. Known as black smokers, they shoot out dark, mineral-rich water. These newly-discovered towering vent chimneys, though, are white, and are made up of calcium carbonate, formed when super-hot water (as high as 554 degrees Fahrenheit) emerged from the sea floor and mixed with frigid ocean water. Unlike the basalt vents, they emit clear hot water rather than black smokey liquid. “This is the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen on the bottom of the ocean,” Robert C. Vrijenhoek, a senior scientist and biologist at MBARI, tells mental_floss.



The odd vents also feature unusual marine life rare to other locales. They’re covered in organisms, especially tubeworms of the genus Oasisia. “They cover the carbonate chimneys top to bottom, as high as 30 meters [98 feet],” Vrijenhoek says. “It’s like a garden of red flowers. It’s incredible.”



Vrijenhoek and his colleagues are still classifying the exact species present at the Pescadero Basin vents. Though found elsewhere in the world, the tubeworms, clams, squat lobsters, and other life that cling to the vents appear in larger numbers in the Pescadero Basin than have been observed elsewhere, while common vent animals like riftia tubeworms are rare, for reasons the scientists cannot yet fully explain. “This unique depth and chemistry has favored a subset of species that might not be common elsewhere,” Vrijenhoek says.

More:
http://mentalfloss.com/article/65178/inside-mysterious-hot-springs-found-deep-below-gulf-california

Science:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/122839558

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Inside the Mysterious Hot Springs Found Deep Below the Gulf of California (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jun 2015 OP
i wonder why there is color in anything down there Romeo.lima333 Jun 2015 #1
As it, why bother? Maybe the critters see it all just fine. Hmmmmm. n/t Judi Lynn Jun 2015 #2
perhaps. i thought they'd all be blind, like cave fish. Romeo.lima333 Jun 2015 #3
That's a good question. Perhaps color serves some other function... Peace Patriot Jun 2015 #4
indeed! thanks for the link i'll check it out Romeo.lima333 Jun 2015 #5

Peace Patriot

(24,010 posts)
4. That's a good question. Perhaps color serves some other function...
Wed Jun 17, 2015, 10:18 PM
Jun 2015

...than identification or warding off predators. Related to heat regulation or something like that? The tube worms certainly have a remarkable red color in their brush tops. What can that color be doing for them? I've also seen David Attenborough vid of extraordinarily colorful--circus colors!--in tiny, tiny critters that live in the deepest ocean. Their bodies also create spectacular light shows. I don't recall if there was an effort to explain these colors and lights.

Here's the original National Geographic article. (It's better than the OP digest.) It shows a pic of a fish with strangely blue eyes, but I don't know if it can see, and the article says nothing about the color/eyesight issue.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2015/06/150610-hydrothermal-vent-gulf-california-ocean-earth-science/

We and other mammals have internal organs that are various colors but these colors are very rarely seen. What is the function of these colors (small intestine is yellow; gall bladder is green, etc.)? I don't know.

I suspect that it will take considerable research to answer your question.

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