News Release

HyBIS explores the Casablanca seamount

Peer-Reviewed Publication

National Oceanography Centre, UK

HybIS

image: This is HybIS being recovered from the sea. view more 

Credit: NOCS

In October, the hydraulic benthic interactive sampler HyBIS maintained by the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS) made ten dives over the Casablanca Seamount, a four-kilometre high seamount located some 300 miles west of Morocco.

The deepest dive was onto the Iberian Abyssal Plain at the base of the seamount, at a depth of 4630 metres and the shallowest at 650 metres on the summit. The dives were part of the RRS Discovery cruise 343, during which Autosub 6000 was also tested to nearly 6000 metres. Together, HyBIS and Autosub6000 – the UK's deepest diving autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) – will be deployed next year at the Mid-Cayman Rise, Caribbean in search of hydrothermal vents in the first of two NOCS cruises to this mid-ocean ridge. D343 provided the last opportunity to test the vehicles before next year's missions.

Despite only being a trial cruise, the Casablanca Seamount dives proved very interesting geologically. According to NOCS scientist Dr Bramley Murton, the HyBIS Chief Scientist, this volcano, which is about 15 million years old, is thought to be long extinct: "We expected to find a sediment-draped dome with little exposed rock and no signs of volcanic life. Instead we discovered a very rugged terrain, with vertical descents of over 100 metres, and an average slope on the flanks of 25 degrees."

Traverses from the summit and down the flanks revealed a change from explosive volcanic deposits of ash and pumice to massive lava flows. The transition was quite rapid some 400 metres below the summit and marked the start of cliffs caused by collapse of the volcanoes flanks. At its highest point, the volcano showed evidence of recent fluid flow with freshly excavated, 1𔃀-metre diameter craters.

Life on the volcano was varied. "We saw sponges, soft corals, lobsters, shrimp, sea cucumbers, sharks and rat-tails. One of the more astonishing sights was a field of silver eel-like fish hanging vertically in the water with their tails just touching the sea floor," said NOCS's Veit Huehnerbach, HyBIS co-pilot.

HyBIS is a remotely operated-TV-guided grab, developed between the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) strategic research division (NSRD) of the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton and the off-shore engineering company Hydro-Lek. The vehicle has thrusters and cameras to assist the location of sampling sites. Its depth capability is 6000 metres and requires two people to pilot and operate it. Altogether, during cruise D343, HyBIS proved itself an excellent survey and sampling tool and a great asset to NOCS.

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Contact information:

For more information contact the NOCS Press Officer Dr Rory Howlett on +44 (0)23 8059 8490 Email: r.howlett@noc.soton.ac.uk

Images are available from the NOCS Press Office (Tel. 023 8059 6100).

Scientist contact: Dr Bramley Murton: email bramley.murton@noc.soton.ac.uk; telephone +44 (0) 23 8059 6543

The National Oceanography Centre, Southampton is the UK's focus for ocean science. It is one of the world's leading institutions devoted to research, teaching and technology development in ocean and earth science. Over 500 research scientists, lecturing, support and seagoing staff are based at the centre's purpose-built waterside campus in Southampton along with over 700 undergraduate and postgraduate students.

The National Oceanography Centre, Southampton is a collaboration between the University of Southampton and the Natural Environment Research Council. The NERC royal research ships RRS James Cook and RRS Discovery are based at NOCS as is the National Marine Equipment Pool which includes Autosub and Isis, two of the world's deepest diving research vehicles.


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