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Beebe Hydrothermal Vent Field

The Beebe Hydrothermal Vent Field (abbreviated BVF, also known as the Piccard Vent Field) is the world's deepest known hydrothermal vent site and is located just south of Grand Cayman in the Caribbean, on the north side of the Mid-Cayman Spreading Centre in the Cayman Trough.[1] Approximately 24 kilometres (15 mi) south of Beebe is the Von Damm Vent Field.

Beebe Vent Field
A series of vents on the Mid-Cayman Spreading Center.
A tall sulfide chimney covered in shrimp
LocationMid-Cayman Rise
Coordinates18°32′48″N 81°43′6″W / 18.54667°N 81.71833°W / 18.54667; -81.71833
Area22,050 square metres (237,300 sq ft)
Max. elevation−4,957 metres (−16,263 ft)
Min. elevation−4,987 metres (−16,362 ft)

At nearly 5,000 metres (16,000 ft) below sea level, it is one of the few known hydrothermal vent sites in the abyssopelagic zone.[2] The hydrothermal plume nicknamed "Piccard" was detected in 2010,[3] and the Beebe site was confirmed later that year.[1] The combined depth and vent fluid temperature make it a popular site for studying aqueous thermodynamics, high-pressure biology, and geochemistry.

Expedition history edit

The Beebe vent field was initially detected in October 2009 by CTD, Eh, and optical backscatter anomalies in the water column above the Mid-Cayman Rise aboard the R/V Cape Hatteras.[3][4] The team deployed HROV Nereus to conduct surveys which identified a double hydrothermal plume at 3,900 metres (12,800 ft) and 4,250 m (13,940 ft) deep and subsequently nicknamed it "Piccard". From collected plume samples, the team were able to predict the approximate location of the vent field at a depth of approximately 5,000 m (16,000 ft) deep, usurping the Ashadze vent field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 4,200 m (13,800 ft)) as the deepest known hydrothermal field.

In 2010, the RRS James Cook's 44th voyage returned to the Mid-Cayman Rise to survey the areas predicted to host hydrothermal sites in 2009.[5] The team deployed the AUV Autosub6000 to map anomalies and RUV HyBIS to collect video, visually confirming the site named "Beebe" after William Beebe at a depth of 4,960 m (16,270 ft).[1][6]

The vent field was further explored by the NOAAS Okeanos Explorer in 2011, R/V Falkor cruise FK008 and R/V Yokosuka cruise YK13-05 in 2013, and cruises AT18-16 and AT42-22 of the R/V Atlantis in 2012 and 2020 respectively.[7][8][9][10][11]

Geography edit

 
Bathymetry profile of the Mid-Cayman trough and spreading center

The Beebe vent field is in the Caribbean Sea, at the northern end of the Mid-Cayman Rise on the segments closest to the Septentrional-Oriente fault zone.[1][12]

The Beebe vent field consists of seven sulfide mounds on the western side of the spreading center, the majority of which are inactive.[13] Central to the field are the main endmember vents, known as Beebe 1–5, which branch from the same mound. Surrounding these endmember vents are Hot Chimlet to the north, Beebe Sea to the East, and Beebe Woods to the South. The series of mounds continue to the northeast of the field, where high-temperature hydrothermal activity used to take place, as evidenced by extinct chimneys.[14]

The vent field is in the territorial waters of the Cayman Islands, which is a self-governing British Overseas Territory.[14]

Geology edit

The Beebe vent field is located in the very near vicinity of the spreading center, which has been described as an ultraslow ridge at a rate of 15 millimetres (0.59 in) to 16.9 millimetres (0.67 in) per year. The area is primarily basalt, with metal-sulfide mounds and talus sourced from hydrothermal activity.[14]

Unlike the Von Damm Vent Field, there is little sediment cover at Beebe.[15]

Chimneys edit

 
Profuse venting at the Beebe Vent Field

Beebe vents 1–5 form a branching complex consisting of pyrite, pyrrhotite, and other oxidized metal-sulfides. These chimneys emit the hottest fluids of anywhere within the field, up to 403 °C (757 °F).[13] Beebe Woods to the south has a similar geological composition, though temperatures are cooled slightly (354 °C (669 °F)). These temperatures are hot enough that iron and other metals have not yet precipitated, giving the chimneys a distinctive black-smoker appearance. These metal-sulfide chimneys are conductive of precious and semi-precious mineral precipitation, such as gold, silver, and copper.[16]

Hot Chimlet to the north features venting at a significantly lower temperature (149 °C (300 °F)), such that the fluids are clear and devoid of metals. Residing on the slope of the mound, the Hot Chimlet site has a light dusting of sulfide materials likely sourced from the center of the field. Hot Chimlet also does not have the impressive chimney structures as at the center of the field, and requires the use of dive markers to identify quickly. Shrimp Gulley, similarly, is a location within the Beebe Sea which is distinguished by abundant biology. The Gulley reaches temperatures around 45 °C (113 °F), with markers also required to find the exact locations of diffuse flow.

Chemistry edit

As with many basalt-hosted systems, Beebe has endmember fluids that are highly acidic in association with basalt dissolution reactions. Such reactions with basalt can be favorable in forming hydrothermal ore deposits.[17] Concentrations of carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide are elevated relative to deep sea water, attributed to origin in the mantle.[13]

The vent field hosts two main areas of black smoker venting, with a fluid at temperatures of over 400 °C (752 °F) and a low salinity of about 2.3 wt% NaCl. Under these conditions, the venting fluids surpass the supercritical threshold of seawater at 407 °C (765 °F) and 298 bar, and is one of few vent sites shown to host sustained supercritical venting.[3][18][19] These hot, acidic conditions make precipitation of metal-sulfide chimneys possible, also giving the hottest vents their characteristic black-smoker appearance from high concentrations of dissolved metals.[18]

Measurements of iron and manganese at Beebe suggest subsurface temperatures of 452 °C (846 °F) or higher.[13]

Organic compounds edit

High temperatures acting on seawater can cause diagenesis or pyrolysis of organic compounds, such that they break up into smaller compounds or alter bond configurations. Small quantities of alkanes have been detected, likely derived from hydrothermally-altered compounds of deep seawater.[13][20] At cooler venting areas, formate and other organic acids have been detected in low concentrations, as high concentrations of carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas may thermodynamically favor abiotic organic acid synthesis.

With abundant iron in the venting plume, there have been many models examining the potential of ligands binding to iron when mixing begins with seawater. These ligands prevent the precipitation of iron in mineral phases, potentially making them bioavailable.[21]

Biology edit

 
Rimicaris hybisae at the Beebe Vent Field

Beebe has an abundance of shrimp present at venting orifices, particularly those of Rimicaris hybisae, belonging to the family of Alvinocarididae, and are almost completely blind.[22] These shrimp have eyes as juveniles but lose them as they age, developing a light-sensing organ that they can use to detect the infrared glow of hot, venting locations.[23] The shrimp at the Beebe vent field are unique from those found at the Von Damm field in that they are a slightly more brown color due to the high concentrations of iron pumped out by the vents. Observations of shrimp behavior suggests that, when in dense congregations, shrimp ascertain carbohydrates from chemosynthetic bacteria.[24] Though not directly observed, shrimp may predate on other organisms or exhibit cannibalism when more sparsely distributed.

There is also an abundance of deep sea anemones, Provannid gastropods, and squat lobsters.[15][25] As with other vent fields, it is possible for deepwater sharks or roaming fishes such as grenadiers to appear around the field.

Microbiology edit

From a microbial standpoint, there are visible mats of microbial activity at both the Beebe and Von Damm vent systems. Exposed rocks have shown filamentous bacteria and orange sediments around the field, where microorganisms such as Beggiatoa are suggested to utilize hydrogen sulfide in venting fluids to metabolize chemosynthetically.[15][25] Some of these microorganisms are present on or within vent crustaceans, being routinely grazed or taking up roles as symbiotic organisms.[24]

At lower-temperature venting locations, Sulfurovum have been identified as a dominant bacteria whereas Methanothermacoccus is an abundant archaea.[26] Geochemical calculations suggest that multiple metabolisms other than hydrogen consumption are favorable in these conditions.[27]

Naming edit

 
Approaching the Beebe vent complex at the Beebe (Piccard) hydrothermal field

The hydrothermal system was suggested to exist on an American-led oceanographic cruise in 2009 on the R/V Cape Hatteras, with 3 hydrothermal plumes detected in the water column: Piccard, Walsh, and Europa.[3][28] Beebe was visually confirmed in early 2010 on a British-led expedition with the RRS James Cook, though the Piccard plume could not be found, so the vent field was named Beebe. Americans returned to the vent field in 2011 on the Okeanos Explorer prior to scientific publications from the previous mission, and named the vent field Piccard, therefore creating a second name for the vent field.[29] The Interridge Database lists the vent field as Beebe,[30] though many American journals publish results under the name of Piccard.

The original name for the detected plume, Piccard, comes from Jacques Piccard, a Swiss oceanographer that dove with Don Walsh to the Challenger Deep. The subsequent naming of the field to Beebe is after the American naturalist William Beebe who frequently dove in the Bathysphere prior to powered submersibles.[31]

Human impacts edit

 
A research team dives at the Beebe vents in 2020.

Since 2010, the Beebe vent field has been explored multiple times by scientists to try to collect samples and videos. Common ecosystem disruptions during hydrothermal expeditions, such as rock collections and artificial illumination, may damage organism photoreceptors at Beebe.[32]

In 2013, cruise YK-13-05 by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) was undertaken to sample and live stream dives of the DSV Shinkai 6500. However, the fiber optical cable was broken during spooling multiple times and was not fully recovered.[11] Uncertainty in cable presence is a potential hazard for human-operated submersibles such as the DSV Alvin, which did not dive at Beebe due to safety concerns.

Beebe's metal sulfides are rich in gold and other industrial elements, which could make deep-sea mining a concern.[16]

External links edit

  • The blog of the British expedition from 2010
  • Beebe vent site in the Interridge Database

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Connelly, Douglas P.; Copley, Jonathan T.; Murton, Bramley J.; Stansfield, Kate; Tyler, Paul A.; German, Christopher R.; Van Dover, Cindy L.; Amon, Diva; Furlong, Maaten; Grindlay, Nancy; Hayman, Nicholas; Hühnerbach, Veit; Judge, Maria; Le Bas, Tim; McPhail, Stephen; Meier, Alexandra; Nakamura, Ko-ichi; Nye, Verity; Pebody, Miles; Pedersen, Rolf B.; Plouviez, Sophie; Sands, Carla; Searle, Roger C.; Stevenson, Peter; Taws, Sarah; Wilcox, Sally (10 January 2012). "Hydrothermal vent fields and chemosynthetic biota on the world's deepest seafloor spreading centre". Nature Communications. 3 (1): 620. Bibcode:2012NatCo...3..620C. doi:10.1038/ncomms1636. PMC 3274706. PMID 22233630.
  2. ^ Beaulieu, Stace E.; Baker, Edward T.; German, Christopher R.; Maffei, Andrew (November 2013). "An authoritative global database for active submarine hydrothermal vent fields: GLOBAL VENTS DATABASE". Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 14 (11): 4892–4905. doi:10.1002/2013GC004998. hdl:1912/6496.
  3. ^ a b c d German, C. R.; Bowen, A.; Coleman, M. L.; Honig, D. L.; Huber, J. A.; Jakuba, M. V.; Kinsey, J. C.; Kurz, M. D.; Leroy, S.; McDermott, J. M.; de Lepinay, B. M.; Nakamura, K.; Seewald, J. S.; Smith, J. L.; Sylva, S. P.; Van Dover, C. L.; Whitcomb, L. L.; Yoerger, D. R. (21 July 2010). "Diverse styles of submarine venting on the ultraslow spreading Mid-Cayman Rise". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (32): 14020–14025. Bibcode:2010PNAS..10714020G. doi:10.1073/pnas.1009205107. PMC 2922602. PMID 20660317.
  4. ^ "NASA Goes Deep in Search of Extreme Environments". NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  5. ^ "Scientific expedition to the world's deepest undersea volcanic rift". www.thesearethevoyages.net.
  6. ^ "British scientific expedition discovers world's deepest known undersea volcanic vents". phys.org.
  7. ^ "Rolling Deck to Repository (R2R)". www.rvdata.us. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  8. ^ "Mid-Cayman Rise Expedition 2011: Background: Mission Plan: NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research". oceanexplorer.noaa.gov. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  9. ^ "Rolling Deck to Repository (R2R)". www.rvdata.us. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  10. ^ "Rolling Deck to Repository (R2R)". www.rvdata.us. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  11. ^ a b R/V Yokosuka & DSV Shinkai 6500 Cruise Report YK13-05. Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology. 2013. http://www.godac.jamstec.go.jp/catalog/data/doc_catalog/media/YK13-05_all.pdf
  12. ^ Van Avendonk, Harm J. A.; Hayman, Nicholas W.; Harding, Jennifer L.; Grevemeyer, Ingo; Peirce, Christine; Dannowski, Anke (June 2017). "Seismic structure and segmentation of the axial valley of the Mid-Cayman Spreading Center". Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 18 (6): 2149–2161. Bibcode:2017GGG....18.2149V. doi:10.1002/2017GC006873.
  13. ^ a b c d e McDermott, Jill M.; Sylva, Sean P.; Ono, Shuhei; German, Christopher R.; Seewald, Jeffrey S. (May 2018). "Geochemistry of fluids from Earth's deepest ridge-crest hot-springs: Piccard hydrothermal field, Mid-Cayman Rise". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 228: 95–118. Bibcode:2018GeCoA.228...95M. doi:10.1016/j.gca.2018.01.021. hdl:1721.1/118477.
  14. ^ a b c "Beebe | InterRidge Vents Database Ver. 3.4". vents-data.interridge.org.
  15. ^ a b c Bennett, Sarah A.; Dover, Cindy Van; Breier, John A.; Coleman, Max (2015-10-01). "Effect of depth and vent fluid composition on the carbon sources at two neighboring deep-sea hydrothermal vent fields (Mid-Cayman Rise)". Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers. 104: 122–133. doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2015.06.005. ISSN 0967-0637.
  16. ^ a b Webber, Alexander P.; Roberts, Stephen; Murton, Bramley J.; Mills, Rachel A.; Hodgkinson, Matthew R. S. (June 2017). "The formation of gold-rich seafloor sulfide deposits: Evidence from the Beebe hydrothermal vent field, Cayman Trough: Gold in the Beebe Vent Field" (PDF). Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 18 (6): 2011–2027. doi:10.1002/2017GC006922.
  17. ^ Yardley, Bruce W. D.; Cleverley, James S. (2015). "The role of metamorphic fluids in the formation of ore deposits". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 393 (1): 117–134. doi:10.1144/SP393.5. ISSN 0305-8719. S2CID 130626915.
  18. ^ a b Webber, A.P.; Murton, B.; Roberts, S.; Hodgkinson, M. . Goldschmidt Conference Abstracts 2014. Geochemical Society. Archived from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  19. ^ Shukman, David (2013-02-21). "Deepest undersea vents discovered". BBC News. Retrieved 2020-05-19.
  20. ^ Lehigh University (2020-08-10). "Hydrothermal Fluid From Piccard Vents Leads to Discovery That Transforms Understanding of Hydrogen Depletion at the Seafloor". SciTechDaily. from the original on 2020-09-24. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
  21. ^ Sander, Sylvia G.; Koschinsky, Andrea (20 February 2011). "Metal flux from hydrothermal vents increased by organic complexation". Nature Geoscience. 4 (3): 145–150. doi:10.1038/NGEO1088.
  22. ^ "Expedition journeys into world's deepest hydrothermal vents". NBC News. Retrieved 2020-05-19.
  23. ^ "Eyeless Shrimp Discovered at Deepest Volcanic Vents". livescience.com. 10 January 2012.
  24. ^ a b Landau, Elizabeth. "Extreme Shrimp May Hold Clues to Alien Life". NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). from the original on 2021-02-19. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
  25. ^ a b "Researchers marvel at world's deepest sea vents". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved 2020-05-19.
  26. ^ Reveillaud, Julie; Reddington, Emily; McDermott, Jill; Algar, Christopher; Meyer, Julie L.; Sylva, Sean; Seewald, Jeffrey; German, Christopher R.; Huber, Julie A. (June 2016). "Subseafloor microbial communities in hydrogen‐rich vent fluids from hydrothermal systems along the M id‐ C ayman R ise". Environmental Microbiology. 18 (6): 1970–1987. doi:10.1111/1462-2920.13173. ISSN 1462-2912. PMC 5021209. PMID 26663423.
  27. ^ Sevgen, Serhat (2020-12-03). "What underwater volcanoes can teach us about Saturn's moon". Sciworthy. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
  28. ^ "Rolling Deck to Repository (R2R)". www.rvdata.us. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  29. ^ "Mid-Cayman Rise Expedition 2011: NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research". oceanexplorer.noaa.gov. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  30. ^ "Beebe | InterRidge Vents Database Ver. 3.4". vents-data.interridge.org. from the original on 1 June 2023. Retrieved 2024-04-28.
  31. ^ "Two new hydrothermal vent fields discovered". University of Bergen. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  32. ^ Van Dover, Cindy Lee (2014-12-01). "Impacts of anthropogenic disturbances at deep-sea hydrothermal vent ecosystems: A review". Marine Environmental Research. 102: 59–72. doi:10.1016/j.marenvres.2014.03.008. ISSN 0141-1136. PMID 24725508.

beebe, hydrothermal, vent, field, abbreviated, also, known, piccard, vent, field, world, deepest, known, hydrothermal, vent, site, located, just, south, grand, cayman, caribbean, north, side, cayman, spreading, centre, cayman, trough, approximately, kilometres. The Beebe Hydrothermal Vent Field abbreviated BVF also known as the Piccard Vent Field is the world s deepest known hydrothermal vent site and is located just south of Grand Cayman in the Caribbean on the north side of the Mid Cayman Spreading Centre in the Cayman Trough 1 Approximately 24 kilometres 15 mi south of Beebe is the Von Damm Vent Field Beebe Vent FieldA series of vents on the Mid Cayman Spreading Center A tall sulfide chimney covered in shrimpLocationMid Cayman RiseCoordinates18 32 48 N 81 43 6 W 18 54667 N 81 71833 W 18 54667 81 71833Area22 050 square metres 237 300 sq ft Max elevation 4 957 metres 16 263 ft Min elevation 4 987 metres 16 362 ft At nearly 5 000 metres 16 000 ft below sea level it is one of the few known hydrothermal vent sites in the abyssopelagic zone 2 The hydrothermal plume nicknamed Piccard was detected in 2010 3 and the Beebe site was confirmed later that year 1 The combined depth and vent fluid temperature make it a popular site for studying aqueous thermodynamics high pressure biology and geochemistry Contents 1 Expedition history 2 Geography 3 Geology 3 1 Chimneys 4 Chemistry 4 1 Organic compounds 5 Biology 5 1 Microbiology 6 Naming 7 Human impacts 8 External links 9 ReferencesExpedition history editThe Beebe vent field was initially detected in October 2009 by CTD Eh and optical backscatter anomalies in the water column above the Mid Cayman Rise aboard the R V Cape Hatteras 3 4 The team deployed HROV Nereus to conduct surveys which identified a double hydrothermal plume at 3 900 metres 12 800 ft and 4 250 m 13 940 ft deep and subsequently nicknamed it Piccard From collected plume samples the team were able to predict the approximate location of the vent field at a depth of approximately 5 000 m 16 000 ft deep usurping the Ashadze vent field Mid Atlantic Ridge 4 200 m 13 800 ft as the deepest known hydrothermal field In 2010 the RRS James Cook s 44th voyage returned to the Mid Cayman Rise to survey the areas predicted to host hydrothermal sites in 2009 5 The team deployed the AUV Autosub6000 to map anomalies and RUV HyBIS to collect video visually confirming the site named Beebe after William Beebe at a depth of 4 960 m 16 270 ft 1 6 The vent field was further explored by the NOAAS Okeanos Explorer in 2011 R V Falkor cruise FK008 and R V Yokosuka cruise YK13 05 in 2013 and cruises AT18 16 and AT42 22 of the R V Atlantis in 2012 and 2020 respectively 7 8 9 10 11 Geography edit nbsp Bathymetry profile of the Mid Cayman trough and spreading center The Beebe vent field is in the Caribbean Sea at the northern end of the Mid Cayman Rise on the segments closest to the Septentrional Oriente fault zone 1 12 The Beebe vent field consists of seven sulfide mounds on the western side of the spreading center the majority of which are inactive 13 Central to the field are the main endmember vents known as Beebe 1 5 which branch from the same mound Surrounding these endmember vents are Hot Chimlet to the north Beebe Sea to the East and Beebe Woods to the South The series of mounds continue to the northeast of the field where high temperature hydrothermal activity used to take place as evidenced by extinct chimneys 14 The vent field is in the territorial waters of the Cayman Islands which is a self governing British Overseas Territory 14 Geology editThe Beebe vent field is located in the very near vicinity of the spreading center which has been described as an ultraslow ridge at a rate of 15 millimetres 0 59 in to 16 9 millimetres 0 67 in per year The area is primarily basalt with metal sulfide mounds and talus sourced from hydrothermal activity 14 Unlike the Von Damm Vent Field there is little sediment cover at Beebe 15 Chimneys edit nbsp Profuse venting at the Beebe Vent FieldBeebe vents 1 5 form a branching complex consisting of pyrite pyrrhotite and other oxidized metal sulfides These chimneys emit the hottest fluids of anywhere within the field up to 403 C 757 F 13 Beebe Woods to the south has a similar geological composition though temperatures are cooled slightly 354 C 669 F These temperatures are hot enough that iron and other metals have not yet precipitated giving the chimneys a distinctive black smoker appearance These metal sulfide chimneys are conductive of precious and semi precious mineral precipitation such as gold silver and copper 16 Hot Chimlet to the north features venting at a significantly lower temperature 149 C 300 F such that the fluids are clear and devoid of metals Residing on the slope of the mound the Hot Chimlet site has a light dusting of sulfide materials likely sourced from the center of the field Hot Chimlet also does not have the impressive chimney structures as at the center of the field and requires the use of dive markers to identify quickly Shrimp Gulley similarly is a location within the Beebe Sea which is distinguished by abundant biology The Gulley reaches temperatures around 45 C 113 F with markers also required to find the exact locations of diffuse flow Chemistry editAs with many basalt hosted systems Beebe has endmember fluids that are highly acidic in association with basalt dissolution reactions Such reactions with basalt can be favorable in forming hydrothermal ore deposits 17 Concentrations of carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide are elevated relative to deep sea water attributed to origin in the mantle 13 The vent field hosts two main areas of black smoker venting with a fluid at temperatures of over 400 C 752 F and a low salinity of about 2 3 wt NaCl Under these conditions the venting fluids surpass the supercritical threshold of seawater at 407 C 765 F and 298 bar and is one of few vent sites shown to host sustained supercritical venting 3 18 19 These hot acidic conditions make precipitation of metal sulfide chimneys possible also giving the hottest vents their characteristic black smoker appearance from high concentrations of dissolved metals 18 Measurements of iron and manganese at Beebe suggest subsurface temperatures of 452 C 846 F or higher 13 Organic compounds edit High temperatures acting on seawater can cause diagenesis or pyrolysis of organic compounds such that they break up into smaller compounds or alter bond configurations Small quantities of alkanes have been detected likely derived from hydrothermally altered compounds of deep seawater 13 20 At cooler venting areas formate and other organic acids have been detected in low concentrations as high concentrations of carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas may thermodynamically favor abiotic organic acid synthesis With abundant iron in the venting plume there have been many models examining the potential of ligands binding to iron when mixing begins with seawater These ligands prevent the precipitation of iron in mineral phases potentially making them bioavailable 21 Biology edit nbsp Rimicaris hybisae at the Beebe Vent FieldBeebe has an abundance of shrimp present at venting orifices particularly those of Rimicaris hybisae belonging to the family of Alvinocarididae and are almost completely blind 22 These shrimp have eyes as juveniles but lose them as they age developing a light sensing organ that they can use to detect the infrared glow of hot venting locations 23 The shrimp at the Beebe vent field are unique from those found at the Von Damm field in that they are a slightly more brown color due to the high concentrations of iron pumped out by the vents Observations of shrimp behavior suggests that when in dense congregations shrimp ascertain carbohydrates from chemosynthetic bacteria 24 Though not directly observed shrimp may predate on other organisms or exhibit cannibalism when more sparsely distributed There is also an abundance of deep sea anemones Provannid gastropods and squat lobsters 15 25 As with other vent fields it is possible for deepwater sharks or roaming fishes such as grenadiers to appear around the field Microbiology edit From a microbial standpoint there are visible mats of microbial activity at both the Beebe and Von Damm vent systems Exposed rocks have shown filamentous bacteria and orange sediments around the field where microorganisms such as Beggiatoa are suggested to utilize hydrogen sulfide in venting fluids to metabolize chemosynthetically 15 25 Some of these microorganisms are present on or within vent crustaceans being routinely grazed or taking up roles as symbiotic organisms 24 At lower temperature venting locations Sulfurovum have been identified as a dominant bacteria whereas Methanothermacoccus is an abundant archaea 26 Geochemical calculations suggest that multiple metabolisms other than hydrogen consumption are favorable in these conditions 27 Naming edit nbsp Approaching the Beebe vent complex at the Beebe Piccard hydrothermal fieldThe hydrothermal system was suggested to exist on an American led oceanographic cruise in 2009 on the R V Cape Hatteras with 3 hydrothermal plumes detected in the water column Piccard Walsh and Europa 3 28 Beebe was visually confirmed in early 2010 on a British led expedition with the RRS James Cook though the Piccard plume could not be found so the vent field was named Beebe Americans returned to the vent field in 2011 on the Okeanos Explorer prior to scientific publications from the previous mission and named the vent field Piccard therefore creating a second name for the vent field 29 The Interridge Database lists the vent field as Beebe 30 though many American journals publish results under the name of Piccard The original name for the detected plume Piccard comes from Jacques Piccard a Swiss oceanographer that dove with Don Walsh to the Challenger Deep The subsequent naming of the field to Beebe is after the American naturalist William Beebe who frequently dove in the Bathysphere prior to powered submersibles 31 Human impacts edit nbsp A research team dives at the Beebe vents in 2020 Since 2010 the Beebe vent field has been explored multiple times by scientists to try to collect samples and videos Common ecosystem disruptions during hydrothermal expeditions such as rock collections and artificial illumination may damage organism photoreceptors at Beebe 32 In 2013 cruise YK 13 05 by the Japan Agency for Marine Earth Science and Technology JAMSTEC was undertaken to sample and live stream dives of the DSV Shinkai 6500 However the fiber optical cable was broken during spooling multiple times and was not fully recovered 11 Uncertainty in cable presence is a potential hazard for human operated submersibles such as the DSV Alvin which did not dive at Beebe due to safety concerns Beebe s metal sulfides are rich in gold and other industrial elements which could make deep sea mining a concern 16 External links editThe blog of the British expedition from 2010 Beebe vent site in the Interridge DatabaseReferences edit a b c d Connelly Douglas P Copley Jonathan T Murton Bramley J Stansfield Kate Tyler Paul A German Christopher R Van Dover Cindy L Amon Diva Furlong Maaten Grindlay Nancy Hayman Nicholas Huhnerbach Veit Judge Maria Le Bas Tim McPhail Stephen Meier Alexandra Nakamura Ko ichi Nye Verity Pebody Miles Pedersen Rolf B Plouviez Sophie Sands Carla Searle Roger C Stevenson Peter Taws Sarah Wilcox Sally 10 January 2012 Hydrothermal vent fields and chemosynthetic biota on the world s deepest seafloor spreading centre Nature Communications 3 1 620 Bibcode 2012NatCo 3 620C doi 10 1038 ncomms1636 PMC 3274706 PMID 22233630 Beaulieu Stace E Baker Edward T German Christopher R Maffei Andrew November 2013 An authoritative global database for active submarine hydrothermal vent fields GLOBAL VENTS DATABASE Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 14 11 4892 4905 doi 10 1002 2013GC004998 hdl 1912 6496 a b c d German C R Bowen A Coleman M L Honig D L Huber J A Jakuba M V Kinsey J C Kurz M D Leroy S McDermott J M de Lepinay B M Nakamura K Seewald J S Smith J L Sylva S P Van Dover C L Whitcomb L L Yoerger D R 21 July 2010 Diverse styles of submarine venting on the ultraslow spreading Mid Cayman Rise Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 32 14020 14025 Bibcode 2010PNAS 10714020G doi 10 1073 pnas 1009205107 PMC 2922602 PMID 20660317 NASA Goes Deep in Search of Extreme Environments NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL Retrieved 2021 08 12 Scientific expedition to the world s deepest undersea volcanic rift www thesearethevoyages net British scientific expedition discovers world s deepest known undersea volcanic vents phys org Rolling Deck to Repository R2R www rvdata us Retrieved 2021 08 12 Mid Cayman Rise Expedition 2011 Background Mission Plan NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research oceanexplorer noaa gov Retrieved 2021 08 12 Rolling Deck to Repository R2R www rvdata us Retrieved 2021 08 12 Rolling Deck to Repository R2R www rvdata us Retrieved 2021 08 12 a b R V Yokosuka amp DSV Shinkai 6500 Cruise Report YK13 05 Japan Agency for Marine Earth Science and Technology 2013 http www godac jamstec go jp catalog data doc catalog media YK13 05 all pdf Van Avendonk Harm J A Hayman Nicholas W Harding Jennifer L Grevemeyer Ingo Peirce Christine Dannowski Anke June 2017 Seismic structure and segmentation of the axial valley of the Mid Cayman Spreading Center Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 18 6 2149 2161 Bibcode 2017GGG 18 2149V doi 10 1002 2017GC006873 a b c d e McDermott Jill M Sylva Sean P Ono Shuhei German Christopher R Seewald Jeffrey S May 2018 Geochemistry of fluids from Earth s deepest ridge crest hot springs Piccard hydrothermal field Mid Cayman Rise Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 228 95 118 Bibcode 2018GeCoA 228 95M doi 10 1016 j gca 2018 01 021 hdl 1721 1 118477 a b c Beebe InterRidge Vents Database Ver 3 4 vents data interridge org a b c Bennett Sarah A Dover Cindy Van Breier John A Coleman Max 2015 10 01 Effect of depth and vent fluid composition on the carbon sources at two neighboring deep sea hydrothermal vent fields Mid Cayman Rise Deep Sea Research Part I Oceanographic Research Papers 104 122 133 doi 10 1016 j dsr 2015 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