Multidisciplinary Scientific Cruise to the Northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge and Azores Archipelago
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Frontiers in Marine Science
Abstract
This work presents the preliminary result of the multidisciplinary cruise EXPLOSEA2
surveying the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge and Azores Archipelago from 46 300 N to 38
300 N aboard the R/V Sarmiento de Gamboa and ROV Luso over 54 days (June 11 to
July 27, 2019). In this cruise report, we detail the geophysical, hydrographic, geological,
oceanographic, ecological, and microbiological data acquired and a brief of main
findings. The cruise addressed the exploration and comprehensive characterization
of venting sites, including the water column, the sediments and rocks that host the
hydrothermal activity, and the associated mineralizations, biology, and microbiology.
Deep hydrothermal chimneys and massive sulfide deposits (up 3,000 m in depth) within
the Moytirra hydrothermal active field were identified on slopes that had not been
explored previously. Another striking finding made during the EXPLOSEA2 cruise was
the field of carbonate chimneys named the “Magallanes-Elcano” field, a potentially relict
ultramafic-hosted hydrothermal site sourced by abiotic methane. This field is related to a
serpentinite and gabbro rock outcropping on a dome-shaped massif named the “Iberian
Massif.” An outstanding finding of the EXPLOSEA2 survey was the identification of the
first garden of soft corals growing after active submarine eruptions were reported in the
Azores Archipelago composed by a high density of soft corals the suborder Alcyoniina
at the summit and flanks of a recent volcanic cone at 160 m water depth developed
during the 1957–1958 eruption of Capelinhos. Several cold-water coral habitats formed
by colonial scleractinians (e.g., Lophelia pertusa and Madrepora oculata), coral gardens
composed of mixed assemblages of black corals (Leiopathes sp.), and octocorals and
dense aggregations of the glass sponge Pheronema carpenteri that may be classified as vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs) have been discovered during the EXPLOSEA2
cruise along the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This work reveals the importance of
multidisciplinary surveys to the knowledge of deep-sea environments.