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      Long-term eruptive activity at a submarine arc volcano

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          Abstract

          Three-quarters of the Earth's volcanic activity is submarine, located mostly along the mid-ocean ridges, with the remainder along intraoceanic arcs and hotspots at depths varying from greater than 4,000 m to near the sea surface. Most observations and sampling of submarine eruptions have been indirect, made from surface vessels or made after the fact. We describe here direct observations and sampling of an eruption at a submarine arc volcano named NW Rota-1, located 60 km northwest of the island of Rota (Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands). We observed a pulsating plume permeated with droplets of molten sulphur disgorging volcanic ash and lapilli from a 15-m diameter pit in March 2004 and again in October 2005 near the summit of the volcano at a water depth of 555 m (depth in 2004). A turbid layer found on the flanks of the volcano (in 2004) at depths from 700 m to more than 1,400 m was probably formed by mass-wasting events related to the eruption. Long-term eruptive activity has produced an unusual chemical environment and a very unstable benthic habitat exploited by only a few mobile decapod species. Such conditions are perhaps distinctive of active arc and hotspot volcanoes.

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          Explorations of Mariana Arc volcanoes reveal new hydrothermal systems

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Nature
            Nature
            Springer Nature
            0028-0836
            1476-4679
            May 25 2006
            May 25 2006
            : 441
            : 7092
            : 494-497
            Article
            10.1038/nature04762
            16724063
            c223be89-c158-4a7c-9fd5-c07adf47436d
            © 2006
            History

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