Gorda Ridge And Mid-Atlantic Ridge: New Frontiers For Undersea Research

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 79 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
Investigations of the Gorda Ridge within the proclaimed U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone off northern California and southern Oregon, and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge extending along the center of the Atlantic Ocean, have received new impetus from the discovery of hot black smokers, sizeable polymetallic massive sulfide deposits, and vent animals at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge by the NOAA VENTS Program in 1985. Prior to that time, the oceanographic community focused investigations of seafloor venting at the faster-spreading oceanic ridges of the Pacific Ocean including the East Pacific Rise, the Galapagos spreading center and the Juan de Fuca Ridge because a consensus held that the faster spreading rates at these ridges were necessary to supply the heat to drive black smoker-type venting. As the only oceanic ridge in the Pacific with slow-spreading characteristics, the Gorda Ridge is an outlier of the slow-spreading ridge system that extends through the Atlantic Ocean and western Indian Ocean comprising more than half the 55,000-kilometer-length of the globe-encircling oceanic ridge system. In response to recent discoveries at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge the oceanographic community is shifting more of its activity to investigation of hydrothermal venting and related processes at slow-spreading oceanic ridges. The discovery cruise by a team of NOAA and university scientists followed by
Citation
APA:
(1988) Gorda Ridge And Mid-Atlantic Ridge: New Frontiers For Undersea ResearchMLA: Gorda Ridge And Mid-Atlantic Ridge: New Frontiers For Undersea Research. International Marine Minerals Society, 1988.