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Drilling the Snake Pit hydrothermal sulfide deposit on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, lat 23/sup 0/22'N
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1986
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VolcanologyEngineeringHydrothermal GeochemistryEarth ScienceMagmatic-hydrothermal SystemDrillingMassive SulfideDark Hydrothermal DepositsHydrothermal FluidMarine GeologyGeologyMid-atlantic RidgeSeafloor Hydrothermal SystemHydrothermal VentTectonicsStructural GeologyExploration GeologyGeochemistryPetrologyHydrothermal Deposits
A major high-temperature hydrothermal area has been discovered in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge rift valley about 25 km south of the Kane Fracture Zone. The vent field consists of a wide area (> 40,000 m/sup 2/) of dark hydrothermal deposits, numerous sulfide chimneys and mounds, some up to 11 m high, and high-temperature black-smoker vents. Ten shallow holes, the first ever drilled in an active submarine hydrothermal area, recovered friable, unconsolidated Fe, Cu-Fe, and Zn sulfides and several large fragments of massive sulfide (mainly chalcopyrite) from the locally thick (> 13 m) hydrothermal deposits. The vents are also associated with an unusual biological community of smaller, more mobile organisms than reported from the East Pacific Rise.