Project: Collaborative Research: Completing North Pond Borehole Experiments to Elucidate the Hydrology of Young, Slow-Spread Crust

Acronym/Short Name:North Pond 2017
Project Duration:2015-10 - 2018-09
Geolocation:North Pond, Mid-Atlantic Ridge flank CORKs

Description

NSF Award Abstract:
Seawater circulates through the upper part of the oceanic crust much like groundwater flows through continental aquifers. However, in the ocean this seawater circulation, many times heated by buried magmatic bodies, transports and releases 25% of the Earth's heat. The rate of fluid flow through ocean crust is estimated to be equal to the amount of water delivered by rivers to the ocean. Much of what we know of this subseafloor fluid flow comes from studies in the eastern Pacific Ocean on ocean crust created by medium and fast spreading mid-ocean ridges. These studies indicate that seawater and its circulation through the seafloor significantly impact crustal evolution and biogeochemical cycles in the ocean and affect the biosphere in ways that are just now beginning to be quantified and understood. To expand this understanding, this research focuses on fluid flow of seafloor generated by slow spreading ridges, like those in the Atlantic, Indian and Arctic Oceans because it is significantly different in structure, mineralogy, and morphology than that formed at fast and intermediate spreading ridges. This research returns to North Pond, a long-term; seafloor; fluid flow monitoring site, drilled and instumented by the Ocean Drilling Program in the Atlantic Ocean. This research site was punctured by boreholes in which fluid flow and geochemical and biological samplers have been deployed for a number of years to collect data and samples. It also provides resources for shipboard and on-shore geochemical and biological analysis. Broader impacts of the work include sensor and technology development, which increases infrastructure for science and has commercial applications. It also provides training for students and the integration of education and research at three US academic institutions, one of which is an EPSCoR state (Mississippi), and supports a PI whose gender is under-represented in sciences and engineering. Public outreach will be carried out in conjunction with the Center for Dark Energy Biosphere Investigations.

This project completes a long-term biogeochemical and hydrologic study of ridge flank hydrothermal processes on slow-spreading, 8 million year old crust on the western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The site, North Pond, is an isolated northeast-trending sediment pond, bounded by undersea mountains that have been studied since the 1970s. During Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 336 in 2011 and an expedition five months later (2012), sensors, samplers, and experiments were deployed in four borehole observatories drilled into the seafloor that penetrated into volcanic crust, with the purpose of monitoring changes in hydrologic properties, crustal fluid composition and mineral alteration, among other objectives. Wellhead sampling in 2012 and 2014 already revealed changes in crustal fluid compositions; and associated pressure data confirm that the boreholes are sealed and overpressured, reflecting a change in the formation as the boreholes recover from drilling disturbances. This research includes a 13-day oceanographic expedition and use of on-site robotically operated vehicles to recover downhole instrument packages at North Pond. It will allow the sampling of crustal fluids, recovering pressure data, and measuring fluid flow rates. Ship- and shore-based analyses will be used to address fundamental questions related to the hydrogeology of hydrothermal processes on slow-spread crust.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Minor ion concentrations in OsmoSamplers that were recovered on R/V Atlantis Expedition AT39-01 with the ROV Jason-II (Depart October 2, 2018 and returned 11/2/2017).2020-08-28Final no updates expected
Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) photographs of biofilms on indium tin oxide electrodes from cathodic poised potential experiments with subsurface crustal samples from CORK borehole observatories at North Pond on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge during R/V A2020-02-03Final no updates expected
Cyclic voltametry data from cathodic poised potential experiments with subsurface crustal samples from CORK borehole observatories at North Pond on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge during R/V Atlantis cruise AT39-012020-02-03Final no updates expected
Metadata for cathodic poised potential experiments with subsurface crustal samples from CORK borehole observatories at North Pond on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge during R/V Atlantis cruise AT39-012019-10-30Final no updates expected
16S rRNA gene amplicon sequences from cathodic poised potential experiments with subsurface crustal samples from CORK borehole observatories at North Pond on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge during R/V Atlantis cruise AT39-012019-10-30Final no updates expected
Chronoamperometry data from cathodic poised potential experiments with subsurface crustal samples from CORK borehole observatories at North Pond on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge during R/V Atlantis cruise AT39-012019-10-30Final no updates expected
CTD data from AT39-01 (North Pond 2017 expedition) from the R/V Atlantis in the central North Atlantic during October 20172019-03-07Final no updates expected
Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) photographs of biofilms and mineral alteration products from R/V Atlantis AT39-01 in the North Pond CORK Sites U1382A, U1383C from 2011-20172019-02-22Final no updates expected

Project Home Page


People

Lead Principal Investigator: Beth N. Orcutt
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences

Principal Investigator: Keir Becker
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (UM-RSMAS)

Principal Investigator: C. Geoffrey Wheat
University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF-IMS)

Contact: Beth N. Orcutt
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences


Programs

Center for Dark Energy Biosphere Investigations [C-DEBI]


Data Management Plan

Data Management Plan associated with awards OCE-1536539, OCE-1536601, OCE-1536623, and OCE-1634025 (78.98 KB)
07/05/2017