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Dr.
Craig Cary, Chief Scientist, prepares to board the submersible Alvin.
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On
October 20, 2002, a research team led by University of Delaware marine
scientist Craig Cary will set sail from San Diego, California, on the
24-day expedition "Extreme 2002: Mission to the Abyss."
Their
mission will be to explore one of the most demanding environments on Earth
super-hot hydrothermal vents nearly 2 miles deep on the Pacific
Ocean floor.
The
scientists will travel aboard the 274-foot research vessel Atlantis
to their dive site in the Pacific and then descend to the vents in the
famous deep-sea submersible Alvin. Both vessels are operated by
the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
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| The
Pompeii worm pokes its head out of its sweltering tube home at the
base of a hydrothermal vent. Photo courtesy of Dr. Richard A. Lutz
and Andrew Reed, Rutgers University. |
Under
Dr. Cary's direction, the researchers will study the vents and the strange
organisms that inhabit them, including the Pompeii worm Earth's
most heat-tolerant animal, able to withstand temperatures up to 80°C
(176°F).
Vents
Teem with Unusual Life
The
ocean's greatest depths once were believed to support only a few organisms.
But in the past 25 years, intrepid explorers, diving to the seafloor in
high-tech submersibles, have disproved that notion. They have discovered
that a number of unusual creatures inhabit some areas of the deep sea
at underwater geysers called hydrothermal vents.
Here,
over a mile beneath the ocean's surface, live dinner-plate-sized clams
reeking of sulfur, towering tubeworms resembling giant lipsticks, ghost-white
crabs prowling for prey, pinkish eel-like fish, and the microscopic bacteria
that hold together this strange web of life.
Currently,
scientists are exploring hydrothermal vent sites to learn more about this
"extreme" environment and its unique community of organisms.
After
all, vent dwellers thrive under some of the most demanding conditions
on the planet. They live in a world of total darkness. They are constantly
bathed in toxic chemicals that rocket out of the vents. And some vent
organisms tiny microbes can survive water hotter than boiling!

Tubeworms
(Riftia pachyptila) may grow to about 3 meters (8 ft) tall. They
have no mouth, eyes, or stomach. They depend on bacteria living inside
them for survival.
What's
more, the atmospheric pressure exerted on these organisms from the weight
of the vast ocean above is more than 250 times the pressure we feel on
land.
Surf
through our Web site and learn more about hydrothermal vents, the fascinating
creatures that inhabit them, the technology that makes deep-sea research
possible, and the discoveries that marine scientists are making. Let's
dive in!
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