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CSIRO Team
Brings Back Deep Ocean Life Sample Bismarck Sea -
May 9, 2000 - A huge undersea chimney, laced with
gold and other minerals and swarming with remarkable
lifeforms has been recovered from the seabed in the
Bismarck Sea, north of Papua New Guinea, by the CSIRO
Research Vessel Franklin.
The find is part of a voyage of discovery by the RV
Franklin to probe the mysteries of vast hydrothermal
systems on the ocean floor, spewing out plumes of
superheated mineral-rich fluids like those which formed
giant ore bodies like Mt Isa and Broken Hill over
a billion years ago.
As well as studying ore-forming processes, the researchers
are hunting for "extremophile" microbes endowed with
the natural ability to process minerals at high temperature.
Their aim is to help make Australia's $37 billion
mineral export industry cleaner, greener, safer and
more competitive.
Their search is being conducted in an eerie landscape
nearly two kilometres below the surface of the ocean.
Smoking undersea chimneys pump mineral fluids from
deep in the earth's crust into the surrounding seawater,
shattered mineral columns resemble ancient ruins,
and undersea hills are mantled in snow-white carpets
of bacteria and organic hydrates - compounds which
can only exist at the extreme pressures of the deep
ocean.
During the search, Franklin's dredge snagged the huge
chimney of a black smoker, a tubular encrustation
of minerals that would make a prized museum display,
according to expedition leader Dr Ray Binns, of CSIRO
Exploration & Mining. "Our dredge must have fallen
right over its top. This anchored the ship for over
an hour but it finally broke off at the base," he
says. "Luckily for us it got wedged into the dredge
frame on its point of balance, so it stayed there
while we winched it all the way up to the ship. It
proved to be 2.7 metres long, 80 cm in diameter at
the base, and weighed some 800 kg in water at least,
closer to a tonne in air.
"It must have been an actively venting chimney, for
live snails dropped into the dredge bag, and fluid
dripping from it was quite acidic, although there
was no characteristic smell of rotten eggs (from hydrogen
sulfide gas) often found with smaller chimneys. "Our
first examination indicated it was teeming with bacteria
and archaea (very ancient and primitive life forms).
The microbiologists aboard were delighted," Dr Binns
says
A major goal of the expedition is to identify particular
microbes that can be used to process minerals on dry
land, and so develop more efficient and cleaner ways
to win metals, explains project designer Dr Dave Dekker
of CSIRO Exploration & Mining. "We believe that microbes
such as these deep sea bugs may enable Australia's
miners to exploit lower grade ore deposits, extract
metals more cheaply, clean up waste streams and may
even improve mine safety."
Microbiologist Dr Peter Franzmann of CSIRO Land &
Water says that the mineral-mining bugs are possibly
relatives of some of the earliest forms of life to
emerge on the planet, more than three billion years
ago. "Back then, conditions were similar to what we
now see in these seafloor hydrothermal vents - high
temperatures, lots of volcanic activity, darkness,
with the nutrients to sustain life pouring out of
the earth itself." Dr Binns says the recovered chimney
is "a particularly handsome specimen, but rather fragile,
consisting mainly of the mineral known as sphalerite
(zinc sulfide)". "The Franklin's crew managed to slide
it out of the yoke without breaking it using the ship's
crane. For the time being we've got it swathed in
cheesecloth provided by the ship's cook, kept damp
with seawater and wrapped with plastic".
The RV Franklin berthed in Rabaul last Thursday (4
May) and is now moving from the Bismarck Sea into
the Pacific with another research team. Led by Dr
Brent McInnes of CSIRO Exploration & Mining, scientists
from Australia, Papua New Guinea, New Zealand and
USA are visiting submarine volcanoes in the Tabar-Lihir-Tanga-Feni
and Solomon Island chains.
Besides studying the volcanoes themselves, this team
is also searching for undersea hot-springs that might
be depositing gold and other minerals. The chances
of finding such springs are good, for the nearby Ladolam
deposit on the island of Lihir is the largest and
youngest epithermal gold deposit in the world.
The geological setting of the volcanoes targeted by
the second cruise is different from those of the Bismarck
Sea, so any further discoveries will expand the range
of modern ore-forming environments that scientists
can use to understand how ore bodies formed in the
past. The outcomes will include better strategies
for future mineral exploration on land, which is becoming
harder all the time, now that prospectors have found
most of the ore bodies that crop out at the surface
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