Biodiversity and degradation potential of oil-degrading bacteria isolated from sediments of hydrothermal and non-hydrothermal areas of the Southwest Mid-Indian Ocean Ridge

Author(s):  
Haolei Shi ◽  
Jiangfeng Cheng ◽  
Wei Gao ◽  
Meng Ma ◽  
Ang Liu ◽  
...  

As a result of the International Indian Ocean Expedition, the bottom of the Indian Ocean is now one of the best known areas of the ocean floor. The Mid-Indian Ocean Ridge, a rugged mountain range, lies in the centre of the Indian Ocean. North-northeast trending fractures offset the axis of the ridge. In the Arabian Sea these fractures are right lateral; in the southwest Indian Ocean they are left lateral. Displacements range from a few miles* to over 200 miles. The northeast Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal are occupied by huge abyssal cones built by sediments discharged from the Indo-Gangetic plain. Extensive abyssal plains lie seaward of the abyssal cones. In low latitudes smooth topography is characteristic of the continental rise, the abyssal cones, and the oceanic rises. However, near the polar front smooth c swale9 topography laps over the normally rugged Mid-Oceanic Ridge. This c swale5 smoothing appears the result of the higher organic productivity of the Antarctic seas. Microcontinents, mostly linear meridional ridges, are unique features of the Indian Ocean. These massive but smooth-surfaced blocks contrast markedly with the broad rugged Mid-Oceanic Ridge.


2010 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1072-1081 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei AO ◽  
Ming-Hui ZHAO ◽  
Xue-Lin QIU ◽  
Jia-Biao LI ◽  
Ai-Guo RUAN ◽  
...  

More than 1000 precise analyses of trace elements in basic and ultrabasic rocks of the Mid-Indian Ocean Ridge have been used for geochemical comparison with similar data for the continents, islands and chondrites. We can draw a preliminary conclusion that the transport of trace elements in the oceanic segment of the Earth was controlled by two main processes: ( a ) degassing of the mantle, and ( b ) primary formation of the oceanic upper mantle and crust. Results of both processes may jointly occur.


Zootaxa ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4482 (3) ◽  
pp. 527 ◽  
Author(s):  
YADONG ZHOU ◽  
YUEYUN WANG ◽  
DONGSHENG ZHANG ◽  
CHUNSHENG WANG

A new species of Branchinotogluma, found at two hydrothermal vent fields on Southwest Indian Ocean Ridge, is described herein. It can be distinguished from its congeners by the small acicular lobe on the tentacular segment, the stout smooth notochaetae, 5 pairs of dorsal and ventral papillae surrounding the pharynx, 2 pairs of long ventral papillae and 4 pairs of ventral lamellae on males, and modified parapodia on posterior segments. Sexual dimorphism is also reported in the new species, as male and female individuals display differences in characters on the ventral papillae and posterior segments. 


2020 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 260-267
Author(s):  
Jae Kyu Lim ◽  
Yun Jae Kim ◽  
Jhung-Ahn Yang ◽  
Teddy Namirimu ◽  
Sung-Hyun Yang ◽  
...  

1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 2329-2340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian J. Fryer ◽  
John D. Greenough

Oceanic-island tholeiitic basalts recovered from four sunken oceanic islands along the Reunion hot-spot trace show trace-element and mineralogical characteristics ranging from typical oceanic-island tholeiites to incompatible-element-depleted tholeiites resembling mid-ocean-ridge basalts. There are also variable degrees of magma evolution at each island. Noble metal (Au, Pd, Pt, Rh, Ru, Ir) abundances tend to decrease with magma evolution and with magma "alkalinity", indicating that the metals behave as compatible elements during crystal fractionation processes and during mantle melting processes. Palladium-to-iridium ratios also decrease with increasing alkalinity. Absolute abundances of elements such as Pd are higher than those in typical mid-ocean-ridge basalts, by factors up to 30, despite many major-element similarities with the latter. Comparison with other types of mafic rocks shows that Pd/Ir ratios increase with decreasing alkalinity in basaltic rocks but plunge to alkali-basalt values in komatiites. A model involving retention of low-melting-point Au, Pd, and Rh in mantle sulphides, which completely dissolve by intermediate percentages of melting, and the high-melting-point metals Ir and Ru in late-melting mantle alloys explains increasing Pd/Ir ratios with decreasing alkalinity (increasing melting percentages) in oceanic basalts and the low Pd/Ir ratios of high-percentage melt komatiites.The high noble metal concentrations in Indian Ocean basalts compared with basalts from many other ocean basins are most easily explained by higher concentrations in their source regions. This may be related to incomplete mixing of a post-core-formation meteoritic component of the upper mantle, or deep mantle plume-derived blebs of core material that either failed to reach the core, during core–mantle differentiation, or were plucked from the core by a convecting lower mantle. The latter is tentatively favoured due to the apparently higher noble metal concentrations in oceanic-island (plume) basalts.


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