Abstract

Abstract Observations made during a cruise of the R/V Professor Logachev at the Snake Pit hydrothermal vent field provide a large database with which to examine the relationships between the geochemical characteristics of the hydrothermal sediments and the fauna that inhabit the area. Correlations between the nature and geochemistry of sediments, the distribution of hydrothermal and peripheral fauna and the hydrothermal activity are established. Three geochemical zones in the Snake Pit area are distinguished. (i) The Central Zone, located within 10–100 m of black smoker chimneys, consisting mainly of hydroxide-sulphide sediments with Fe sulphides predominant. Barite is found only in this zone and vent-associated organisms distinctly predominate over non-vent fauna. (ii) The Intermediate Zone encompasses high-temperature springs at a distance from 50 to 150 m. Sediments are chiefly sulphide-hydroxide composition and are dominated by Fe hydroxide and sulphide minerals in an oxide envelope. The non-vent specific fauna show maximum concentrations. (iii) The Outer Zone is located within a radius of 150–500 m from the smokers. The sediment composition is characterized by a predominance of sulphide-hydroxide transitional differences with notably varying compositions of oxide and sulphide minerals. Minor sestonophages prevail in the fauna, which is typical of communities with a pronounced oligotrophic structure. From the Central Zone towards the Outer Zone, the frequency of the bacterial mats seen on photographs decreases and the hydrothermal sediments show a similar trend. Analysis of the hydrothermal sediment obtained from the cores shows: (i) Mn is absent; (ii) barite is found only in the Central Zone; and (iii) chalcopyrite and pyrrhotite concentrations decrease and opal and quartz concentrations increase with increasing distance from the nearest smoker. Comparisons between the Mid-Atlantic Ridge hydrothermal fields of TAG, Snake Pit and 15°N indicate a decrease in the hydrothermal and biological activities with latitude (TAG, Snake Pit, 15°N), which might be due to their evolutionary history.

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