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Hot Vents Beneath an Icy Ocean: The Aurora Vent Field, Gakkel Ridge, Revealed

Academic article
Year of publication
2022
Journal
Oceanography
External websites
Cristin
Arkiv
Doi
Contributors
Eva Ramirez-Llodra, Claudio Argentino, Maria Baker, Antje Boetius, Carolina Costa, Håkon Dahle, Emily Maria Denny, Pierre-Antoine Dessandier, Mari Heggernes Eilertsen, Benedicte Ferré, Cristopher R. German, Kevin Hand, Ana Hilário, Lawrence Hislop, John W. Jamieson, Dimitri Kalenitchenko, Achim Mall, Giuliana Panieri, Autun Purser, Sofia P. Ramalho, Eoghan Reeves, Leighton Rolley, Samuel Pereira, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo Ribeiro, Muhammed Fatih Sert, Ida Helene Steen, Marie Helene Paula Stetzler, Runar Stokke, Lissette Victorero, Francesca Vulcano, Stig Vågenes, Kate Alyse Waghorn, Stefan Bünz

Summary

Evidence of hydrothermal venting on the ultra-slow spreading Gakkel Ridge in the Central Arctic Ocean has been available since 2001, with first visual evidence of black smokers on the Aurora Vent Field obtained in 2014. But it was not until 2021 that the first ever remotely operated vehicle (ROV) dives to hydrothermal vents under permanent ice cover in the Arctic were conducted, enabling the collection of vent fluids, rocks, microbes, and fauna. In this paper, we present the methods employed for deep-sea ROV operations under drifting ice. We also provide the first description of the Aurora Vent Field, which includes three actively venting black smokers and diffuse flow on the Aurora mound at ~3,888 m depth on the southern part of the Gakkel Ridge (82.5°N). The biological communities are dominated by a new species of cocculinid limpet, two small gastropods, and a melitid amphipod. The ongoing analyses of Aurora Vent Field samples will contribute to positioning the Gakkel Ridge hydrothermal vents in the global biogeographic puzzle of hydrothermal vents