News Release
WHOI Scientists and Engineers Explore "Lost City" in the Atlantic
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
July 29, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
Biologist Tim Shank of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)
is “at sea” once again studying marine life at the bottom of the ocean,
but this time it is via television monitors in real time from the
comfort of a shore-based facility thousands of miles away. Shank
and most of the researchers investigating the Lost City hydrothermal
vent field, about 2,500 feet below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean,
are ashore in a classroom outfitted as a command center at the
University of Washington (UW) in Seattle.
Chief Scientist for the cruise, Deborah Kelley of UW, and the other
researchers from more than six research institutions are able to direct
sampling efforts and be in constant communication with four scientists,
students, remotely operated vehicle pilots and other team members on
the NOAA vessel Ronald H. Brown. Oceanographer Robert Ballard is
co-chief scientist with Kelley and is leading the efforts at sea.
The expedition marks the return to the Lost City vent field discovered
in 2000 during a National Science Foundation cruise about the WHOI
research vessel Atlantis. The
vent field is on top of an underwater mountain the size of Mt.
Ranier, called the Atlantis Massif, on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge about
3,000 miles east of Florida. It is named for WHOI’s first research
vessel and the vessel of the same name that discovered the vent field.
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is part of an underwater chain of
mountains known as the mid-ocean ridge system that circles the Earth
for 40,000 nautical miles. The ocean crust here is about 1.5 million
years old, and scientists believe the Lost City field has been active
for thousands of years. There are more than 30 active and
inactive chimneys in the field, which is about 1,300 feet long and 1,000 feet
wide at a depth of about 2,500 feet. Some of the chimneys are very small and others 60 to
100 feet tall. The largest structure is
about 18 stories, or 200 feet, tall and is unlike any found at other
vents.
Hydrothermal vents were discovered in 1977 on the Galapagos
Rifts in the eastern Pacific, part of the mid-ocean ridge system where
the great crustal plates of the Earth are in constant motion and new
ocean crust is formed, often by magma reaching the ocean floor.
Black smokers spewing superheated water more than 700 degrees
Fahrenheit were found on the East Pacific Rise south of Baja California
in 1979. But the Lost City vent field is different. It is based
on heat as seawater reacts with rocks below the field, not on
volcanism, and the fluids are much cooler and nearly 100 percent
carbonate, like limestone found in caves, ranging in color from white
to gray.
Shank was part of the original expedition, as are most of the
scientists involved in the current cruise, which began July 23 and ends
August 4. He has studied hydrothermal vents in the
Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, looking at the evolution of
animals between oceans. Unlike other vents, where animals
can be many feet long or the size of dinner plates, most of the animals
at the Lost City vents are very small, less than a half-inch with
translucent or invisible shells. Shank wants to know if they are unique
to Lost City or if they are found at other vent systems around the
world.
Other WHOI staff on the expedition include engineers from the Deep
Submergence Laboratory, graduate students and postdoctoral fellows. All
the WHOI researchers except for Shank are among the 31 expedition
members at sea.
“This has been a very interesting experience,” Shank says. “I was a
college student when Bob Ballard, then a scientist at WHOI and a member
of the teams that found the hydrothermal vents and black smokers in the
late 1970s, first suggested the idea of telepresence, taking
people to sea remotely but in real time. He and WHOI colleagues
demonstrated that vision with the first JASON Project in 1989, enabling
students to drive the remotely operated vehicle JASON in real time via
satellite and sharing the excitement of exploration with the public at
museums and science centers. Scientists were able, for the first
time, to direct sampling in real time from the command center at
WHOI. I heard those stories, and now I am participating in the
realization of that vision on a much bigger scale.”
Shank says he is anxious to study the samples collected at sea, and to
talk with his colleagues who experienced first hand the expedition at
sea. “We
have come a long way since conducting the telepresence of 1989. This
expedition has demonstrated that telepresence technology is now
providing magnificant opportunities
to include many more scientists, students and the public in first hand
exploration
of the sea. Conducting in-depth scientific investigations through
remote research teams will require more time and experience to reach
its full potential. There is no doubt that telepresence is clearly an
exciting way to bring the global public to explore the depths of our
oceans. This is an extremely exciting
time in ocean exploration.”
Major partners in the expedition are the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, University of Washington, University of
Rhode Island, Institute for Exploration, Jason Foundation for
Education, Immersion Presents, and the National Geographic Society.
Immersion Presents broadcasts are being seen at select Boys and Girls
Clubs, aquariums and museums.
The public can follow the Lost City voyage at:
http://www.oceanexplorer.noaa.gov
http://www.immersionpresents.org or
http://www.Jason.org/lostcity
Originally published: July 29, 2005

