What Is The Mid-Ocean Ridge?
The mid-ocean ridge system is the most extensive
chain of mountains on earth,Bathymetric map showing a global view of the mid-ocean ridge (MOR). |
ascends all the way up to the seafloor, producing enormous volcanic eruptions of basalt, and building the longest chain of volcanoes in the world! The molten rock that does not erupt freezes onto the edges of the plates as they spread apart. In 1783, a segment of the ridge which emerges above sea-level in Iceland erupted more than 12 cubic kilometers of lava- enough to pave the entire U.S. interstate freeway system to a depth of 10 meters. The scorching lava (~1200 ºC), as well as 50 million tons of sulfur dioxide released into the atmosphere, ruined crops and caused the death of more than 10,000 Icelanders, a quarter of the nation's population at the time.
A big picture cross section showing melt (molten rock) in the upper
mantle beneath the East Pacific Rise. Melt extends over 100 kilometers
deep below oceanic crust, and spans a breadth of several hundred
kilometers.
Since most of the mid-ocean ridge is more than 2000
meters deep, most of its eruptions go unnoticed. In fact, accurate maps
along the mid-ocean ridge did not exist until the last ten years, and
even now much of it remains unmapped. Accurate maps that exist along
portions of the mid-ocean ridge show that the zone of recent volcanic
activity is narrow, less than 10 km and often less than 1 km wide. This
region generating new ocean floor is also characterized by many small to
moderate earthquakes. Some of these earthquakes are caused by volcanic
eruptions, and others are caused by breaking and ripping of the thin,
newly created plate as it spreads to either side of the ridge.
Along the crests of the volcanoes of the mid-ocean
ridge, cracks allow the near-freezing sea water to seep deep into the
hot new crust. This water becomes superheated to temperatures of greater
than 400ºC (752ºF), causing the water to become so buoyant it shoots
out of the seafloor at very high speeds, like water gushing from a
broken fire hydrant. This water, however, is not clear and looks like
thick black smoke. The hot "hydrothermal" water dissolves minerals out
of the basalt crust and reacts with cold sea water when coming back up
to the seafloor. The black appearance is caused by precipitation of tiny
mineral particles in the plume of hot water as it gushes out of the
seafloor. Chimneys and mounds of minerals deposit very rapidly around
these "black smoker" hydrothermal vents. The main minerals are zinc-,
copper-, and iron-sulfides (such as pyrite "fool's gold"). Sometimes
there are traces of platinum, gold and silver, but usually not enough to
make these deposits economic since they are so deep.
Bathymetric image of the East Pacific Rise.
Like the rest of the deep ocean floor, scientists have explored less of the mountains of the mid-ocean ridge system than the surface of Venus or Mars, or the dark side of the moon. Use of submersible or remotely operated vehicles to explore the mid-ocean ridge has provided information on less than 0.1% of the mid-ocean ridge! Much of the mid-ocean ridge still remains a mystery, and we will continue to explore it.
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