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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
April
Geologist digs deep - the
Pito Deep, 6,000 meters beneath the ocean
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
courtesy Stephen Hurst |
| Illinois
structural geologist Stephen Hurst "holds hands"
with Alvin, the deep-sea submersible, which was used
to probe Pito Deep, a rift in Earth's crust nearly
6,000 meters deep about 350 miles north and slightly
east of Easter Island. |
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4/21/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Late last January, while most people were battling winter’s cold
and snow, University of Illinois structural geologist
Stephen Hurst left for a monthlong cruise in the South Pacific. It was
no vacation, though. Hurst joined a team of scientists, engineers and
technicians who set sail from Easter Island to explore the Pito Deep,
a rift in Earth’s crust nearly 6,000 meters deep.
Funded by the National Science Foundation, the expedition had as its
goal to probe the ocean crust, and gain a better understanding of how
it was created.
“Pito Deep is one of the few locations where such investigations
can be made,” Hurst said. “The rift is on the boundary between
the Easter Island microplate and the Nazca plate, in an area where tectonic
movement is pulling the crust apart.”
Unlike rifts caused by sea-floor spreading, at Pito Deep there is no
fresh magma obscuring the chasm. As a result, the crust is exposed like
a split watermelon. The naturally occurring cross-section offers scientists
an opportunity to study the structure of the ocean crust and how it
formed.
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
courtesy Stephen Hurst |
| Having
participated in six similar cruises, Hurst was involved
with many technical operations of the expedition,
from preparing bathymetric maps to analyzing photographs
to diving in Alvin. |
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Hurst rendezvoused
with the rest of the scientific team on Easter Island. While awaiting
final preparations, he had an opportunity to explore the quarry where
most of the island’s famous stone heads, or Moai, were carved.
“The quarry is spectacular,” Hurst said. “There are
approximately 300 Moai scattered throughout the quarry area, in various
stages of completion. Some are 40 feet long. While the workmanship may
not equal that of Michelangelo, the Moai are still very impressive.”
When all was made ready, Hurst and the others boarded the Atlantis (host
ship for the deep-sea submersible Alvin) and began the 24-hour cruise
to Pito Deep, which is about 350 miles north and slightly east of Easter
Island.
Having participated in six similar cruises, Hurst was involved with
many technical operations of the expedition, from preparing bathymetric
maps to analyzing photographs to diving in Alvin.
The floor of Pito Deep lies about 1,500 meters deeper than Alvin can
safely dive, but this was not a problem for the researchers. “The
bottoms of these canyons are usually filled with sediment and debris
from rockslides,” Hurst said. “For our studies, we wanted
to collect rocks from the steepest, not the deepest, part of the chasm.”
The descent takes nearly two hours. The pilot and two “observers”
spend the time talking, listening to music or rechecking the equipment.
“You can’t sit back and enjoy the view,” Hurst said,
“because there is no view. Sunlight doesn’t penetrate the
ocean much past the first 100 meters, so for nearly the entire ride
down it’s dark as night outside.”
To conserve battery power, Alvin’s powerful floodlights are rarely
used during the descent. Because of the cramped space and limited view,
each prospective observer is tested for claustrophobia before being
allowed on a dive.
During the dive, the water temperature falls from about 80 degrees Fahrenheit
at the surface to close to freezing at depth. Separating the sub’s
occupants from the cold water is 2 inches of titanium hull, which also
offers protection from the crushing pressure.
“Because of the enormous pressures we experience, it’s not
uncommon to find Alvin’s hull festooned with net bags filled with
Styrofoam cups and mannequin heads at the beginning of a dive,”
Hurst said. “The water pressure squeezes them to a tiny fraction
of their original size, making neat souvenirs of the dive.”
The researchers have about five hours to explore the abyss and collect
rock samples from the cliff face before Alvin’s power runs low
and they must float to the surface.
A veteran of 19 dives, Hurst said each dive is unique. “In addition
to some spectacular outcrops, this time I saw a deep-water holothurian
for the first time. A very unusual type of sea cucumber, the animal
was deep purple, translucent, with a bright pink fluorescent patch and
a fringe around the top that waved back and forth. The creature was
peacefully swimming at a depth of 3,700 meters.”
There was also a moment of consternation on one of his Pito Deep dives,
when a pilot-in-training accidentally shut off Alvin’s power.
“In an instant, all was dark and quiet,” Hurst said. “Fortunately,
the master pilot quickly restored power.”
Although data analysis will take many months, Hurst said the expedition’s
preliminary results are positive. The researchers found the types of
rocks they were looking for – rocks from the base of the ocean
crust.
“We discovered that Pito Deep has a sort of layer cake geology,”
Hurst said. “Like frosting on a cake, the top layer consists of
horizontal lava flows. Beneath that is a layer of vertical dikes –
the conduits through which the lava flowed. Beneath that is the now
solid magma chamber at the base of the ocean crust. And beneath that
lies the mantle.”
It may be years before Alvin is scheduled to return to Pito Deep. But
when it is, Hurst said he will be ready for another cruise to the South
Pacific.
Editor’s
note: To reach Stephen Hurst, call 217-333-0205; e-mail: shurst@uiuc.edu.
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