Preface | p. xvii |
Acknowledgments | p. xix |
The Non-Vent Deep Sea | p. 3 |
The Physical Environment in the Deep Sea | p. 4 |
The Deep-Sea Fauna | p. 5 |
Deep-Sea Diversity | p. 8 |
Biogeography and Population Genetics | p. 11 |
Biochemical and Physiological Adaptations to the Deep-Sea Environment | p. 13 |
Benthopelagic Coupling between Surface Productivity and the Deep Sea | p. 15 |
Rates of Biological Processes in the Deep Sea | p. 18 |
The Vent Contrast | p. 19 |
| p. 20 |
Geological Setting ot Hydrothermal Vents | p. 25 |
What Are Mid-Ocean Ridges? | p. 25 |
How Spreading Rates for Ridge Axes Are Determined | p. 28 |
Spreading Rates | p. 29 |
Segmentation | p. 31 |
Magma Supply and Spreading Rate | p. 34 |
Back-Arc and Fore-Are Spreading Centers | p. 36 |
Seamounts | p. 37 |
Volcanic and Tectonic Seafloor Features | p. 39 |
Crustal Structure | p. 39 |
Volcanic and Tectonic Fissures | p. 39 |
Lava Lakes, Drainback. Features, and Lava Pillars | p. 41 |
Axial Boundary Faults | p. 41 |
Lava Flow Morphologies | p. 43 |
Emplacement of Lavas and the Time-Course of a Diking Event | p. 43 |
Lava Dating | p. 45 |
Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Fields | p. 47 |
Missing Heat and Hydrothermal Cooling at Ridge Crests | p. 47 |
Sulfide Deposits | p. 48 |
Morphological Variations | p. 48 |
Columnar Chimneys and Black Smokers | p. 49 |
White Smokers | p. 50 |
Beehives and Flanges | p. 50 |
Complex Sulfide Mounds | p. 53 |
Weathering of Seafloor Sulfides | p. 56 |
Dimensions and Ages of Active Hydrothermal Fields | p. 56 |
Low-Temperature Diffuse Flows | p. 58 |
Sediment-Hosted Hydrothermal Systems | p. 60 |
Ophiolites | p. 61 |
Appendix | p. 63 |
References | p. 70 |
Chemical and Physical Properties of Vent Fluids | p. 76 |
Submarine Hydrothermal Circulation Cells: High-Temperature Reaction Zones | p. 76 |
Phase Separation | p. 78 |
Flow Rates, Transit Times, and Temperature of Formation | p. 80 |
End-Member Fluids | p. 80 |
Composition 80 Basic Controls on Chemistry | p. 81 |
Magmatic Inputs | p. 82 |
Evolution of Vent-Fluid Chemistry | p. 83 |
Back-Arc Fluid Chemistries | p. 83 |
Thermal Radiation | p. 84 |
Axial Low-Temperature, Diffuse-Flow Chemistry | p. 85 |
Flow Rates, Temperature, and Temperature Variability | p. 86 |
Silicate | p. 87 |
Sulfide | p. 87 |
Oxygen | p. 89 |
Profiles of Oxygen, Sulfide, Silicate, and Temperature | p. 89 |
Methane, Manganese, and Iron | p. 91 |
Nitrogen and Phosphorus Compounds | p. 92 |
Flank Low-Temperature Fluids | p. 92 |
Global Fluxes and the Hydrothermal Influence on Ocean Chemistry and Currents | p. 92 |
References | p. 94 |
Hydrothermal Plumes | p. 99 |
Anatomy of a Black-Smoker Plume | p. 99 |
Orifice | p. 99 |
Buoyant Plume | p. 100 |
Effluent Layer | p. 101 |
Megaplumes | p. 104 |
Spatial and Temporal Distributions of Plumes | p. 106 |
Relationship between Plume Distributions and Geophysical Parameters | p. 106 |
Plume-DTiven Mesoscale Circulation | p. 110 |
Plume Vortices | p. 110 |
Advection and Downwelling | p. 110 |
Basin-Scale Circulation | p. 111 |
Diffuse-Flow Plumes | p. 112 |
References | p. 112 |
Microbial Ecology | p. 115 |
Autotrophic Organisms at Vents | p. 117 |
Nomenclature | p. 117 |
Aerobic and Anaerobic Chemoautotrophy at Vents | p. 117 |
Methanotrophy | p. 119 |
Carbon Dioxide Fixation | p. 120 |
Mixotrophy | p. 120 |
Net Chemoautotrophic Production in Free-Living Hydrothermal-Vent Microorganisms | p. 120 |
Alternatives to Chemoautotrophy | p. 120 |
Organic Thennogenesis Hypothesis | p. 121 |
Detrital Thennal Alteration Hypothesis | p. 121 |
Ecology of Free-Living Microorganisms | p. 122 |
Microbial Habitats | p. 122 |
Hyperthen-nophiles and Superthermophiles | p. 122 |
Flange Microbial Ecology and the Archaea | p. 125 |
Microorganisms in Black-Smoker Fluids | p. 125 |
The "Endeavour Model" | p. 125 |
The Subsurface Biosphere | p. 127 |
Plume Microbiology | p. 127 |
Suspended Microbial Populations | p. 128 |
Microbial Community Composition | p. 129 |
Dominance of a Single | |
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