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NOAA Ship Explores Undersea Volcano More Than 10,000-ft. High, Maps Indonesian Ocean Seafloor

July 12, 2010

Kawio Barat (West Kawio) seamount.

This is a perspective view of the Kawio Barat (West Kawio) seamount looking from the northwest. The underwater volcano rises around 3,800 meters from the seafloor.

High resolution (Credit: Image courtesy of INDEX 2010: Indonesia-USA Deep-Sea Exploration of the Sangihe Talaud Region.)

In the first week of a joint Indonesia - U.S. exploration of the deep ocean north of Sulawesi, Indonesia, NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer’s built-in multibeam sonar mapped a huge undersea volcano while cameras on the ship’s remotely-operated vehicle took high-definition images of the feature called Kawio Barat, referring to the ocean area west of Kawio Islands.

Scientists chose Kawio Barat as the first target for the expedition based on satellite information and data collected by a joint Indonesian-Australian team in 2004. The immense underwater feature served as an ideal initial target to calibrate onboard tools and technologies being used on the ships maiden voyage. Expedition scientists hope the maps and video produced from the expedition will pave the way for other researchers to follow up on their preliminary findings.

IFE's Little Hercules ROV descends down to the summit of the Kawio Barat submarine volcano.

High resolution (Credit: Image courtesy of INDEX 2010: Indonesia-USA Deep-Sea Exploration of the Sangihe Talaud Region.)

“This is a huge undersea volcano, taller than all but three or four mountains in Indonesia, and rising more than ten thousand feet from the seafloor in water more than eighteen thousand feet deep,” said Jim Holden, U.S. chief scientist for the first leg of the joint expedition and a microbiologist from the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, who is operating from an Exploration Command Center in Jakarta, Indonesia. “The more we understand these undersea features and the communities of life they support, the better we can manage and protect the ocean and its resources.”

In a new model of exploring the ocean through telepresence, most scientists work from shore. Holden and other scientists at the Exploration Command Centers in Jakarta and Seattle are connected to Okeanos Explorer live via satellite and high-speed Internet pathways, and can interact with shipboard personnel to guide the expedition.

The Little Hercules ROV images a vent plume.

The IFE's Little Hercules ROV images a vent plume as it descends to the summit of Kawio Barat submarine volcano.

High resolution (Credit: Image courtesy of INDEX 2010: Indonesia-USA Deep-Sea Exploration of the Sangihe Talaud Region.)

Indonesian and U.S. scientists believe that investigating previously unexplored ocean areas will yield new phenomena and provide information that will improve our understanding of ocean ecosystems, ocean acidification and climate change impacts.

“Ocean-related concerns, including food security and protecting ocean ecosystems that support fisheries, affect many nations including Indonesia—a nation of 17,000 islands,” said Sugiarta Wirasantosa, Indonesia’s chief scientist for the joint expedition and principal investigator at Indonesia’s Agency for Marine and Fishery Research. “To understand and manage such things, we must first explore. That’s why this expedition is so important.”

Barnacles covering sulphur structures on Kawio Barat volcano.

Close-up imagery showing barnacles covering sulphur structures on Kawio Barat volcano. Their tentacles, or ‘cirri,’ extended like blooming flowers, then folded back into the shell. The white fluff on the cirri are filaments of bacteria that grow in the passing vent water. The barnacles hold them out to improve growth then, apparently, withdraw to “lick their fingers.”

High resolution (Credit: Image courtesy of INDEX 2010: Indonesia-USA Deep-Sea Exploration of the Sangihe Talaud Region.)

Thus far, Okeanos Explorer has mapped 2,400 square miles of the Indonesian seafloor, an area equal to the size of Delaware. In mid-July, the Indonesian research and fisheries vessel Baruna Jaya IVwill map more of the seafloor and deploy instruments within the Kawio Islands before both ships meet in the Indonesian Port of Bitung. They will redeploy on July 21 to continue exploring more of the uncharted ocean near the island chains of Sangihe and Talaud. The expedition concludes on August 14.

“It’s very much like solving a puzzle,” said Holden. “First we map the seafloor, and if we see something of interest, scientists ashore and shipboard personnel may have the ship stop to put more sensors and systems in the water. This preliminary investigation will include deploying an underwater robot called an ROV, or remotely-operated vehicle, with a pilot on the ship controlling the ROV far below. The Institute for Exploration's Little Hercules ROV is part of a two-body system  that can go as deep as 13,000 feet, and when the lights and high-definition video cameras on both are turned on, it’s live from the seafloor to scientists ashore.”  

Marine biologist Verena Tunnicliffe.

In NOAA’s Exploration Command Center in Seattle, marine biologist Verena Tunnicliffe excitedly points to close-up imagery of a type of goose-neck barnacles that can wave around on a stalk. She explains that these barnacles are particularly intriguigng as they appear similar to forms seen near Lau and the volcanic arc north of New Zealand.

High resolution (Credit: Image courtesy of INDEX 2010: Indonesia-USA Deep-Sea Exploration of the Sangihe Talaud Region.)

The joint expedition is chronicled at oceanexplorer.noaa.gov with much of the site written in both English and Bahasa Indonesia. The site includes logs from scientists at sea and ashore, images from the expedition, and expedition education lesson plans aligned with U.S. National Education Teaching Standards.

 

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VIDEO: ROV Captured Images of Kawio Barat Volcano

Marine biologist Verena Tunnicliffe.

VIDEO: Imagery captured by the high definition cameras on the Institute for Exploration's Little Hercules ROV on June 30, 2010 during the vehicles second dive down to Kawio Barat volcano. (Credit: NOAA Okeanos Explorer Program, INDEX-SATAL 2010.)

This video shows just some of the stunning imagery captured by the high definition cameras on the Institute for Exploration's Little Hercules ROV on June 30, 2010 during the vehicles second dive down to Kawio Barat volcano. During the descent to the location where plumes were discovered the previous day, the ROV encounters white plumes of warm sulphur-rich water and follows the plumes to their vent source amongst volcanic rock. The rocks surrounding the vents are covered in white sulphur. Close up images of both yellow and black frozen flows of sulphur are also shown: colour indicates the temperature when molten sulphur was extruded. Shrimp and limpets live among the strands of yellow and black sulphur, and feed on the bacteria that grow near the vents.

The latter portion of the video shows another hydrothermal area on Kawio Barat with a very dense population of stalked barnacles! These vent barnacles have filaments of bacteria growing on their feeding appendages; they retract the appendages to feed on the filaments. A sulfide chimney emitting hot water among a field of chimneys and barnacles as far as the eye could see is also shown; these chimneys are built from mineral precipitation when the hot vent fluids mix with seawater. Video courtesy of NOAA Okeanos Explorer Program, INDEX-SATAL 2010.