Hydrothermal activities and distribution
of pipe swarms on the subducting plate near the Mussau Trench. Credit: IOCAS
Hydrogen-producing
hydrothermal systems in the deep ocean are rare but critical to understanding
Earth's internal processes and the conditions that may have fostered life's
origins. Now scientists from the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy
of Sciences (IOCAS) have discovered a massive hydrogen-rich hydrothermal system
beneath the western Pacific seafloor, offering a new glimpse into deep-sea
serpentinization—a process in which iron- and magnesium-rich rocks chemically
react with water to form serpentine minerals and release hydrogen.
The Kunlun hydrothermal field—a
tectonically active site roughly 80 kilometers west of the Mussau Trench on the
Caroline Plate—comprises 20 large seafloor depressions (some exceeding 1
kilometer in diameter) clustered together like a pipe swarm, a group of
vertical or steeply inclined cylindrical rock structures that funnel liquid or
gas from Earth's interior.
The system was explored using the crewed
submersible Fendouzhe. In situ investigations revealed abundant hydrogen-rich fluids and extensive carbonate formations, all
located below the carbonate compensation depth. The findings were published on August 8 in Science
Advances.
"The Kunlun system stands out for
its exceptionally high hydrogen flux, scale, and unique geological
setting," said Prof. Sun Weidong, the study's corresponding author.
"It shows that serpentinization-driven hydrogen generation can occur far
from mid-ocean ridges, challenging long-held assumptions."
Deploying advanced seafloor Raman
spectroscopy, the team measured molecular hydrogen concentrations of 5.9–6.8
mmol/kg in diffuse hydrothermal fluids. Although the fluids themselves are
moderately warm (less than 40°C), geochemical markers indicate much higher
subsurface temperatures—sufficient to drive dolomite formation—pointing to
intense fluid–rock interactions deep beneath the seafloor.
Based on discharge area mapping and flow
velocity analysis, the Kunlun field's annual hydrogen flux is estimated at 4.8
× 1011 mol/year,
representing at least 5% of the global abiotic hydrogen output from all
submarine sources—a notable contribution for a single system.
Geological features—including
steep-walled craters resembling kimberlite pipes, explosive breccia deposits,
and layered carbonate structures—suggest the hydrothermal activity has followed
a staged evolution: gas-driven eruptions first, followed by prolonged
hydrothermal circulation and mineral deposition.
"What's particularly intriguing is
its ecological potential," Prof. Sun said. "We observed diverse
deep-sea life thriving here—shrimp, squat lobsters, anemones, and
tubeworms—species that may depend on hydrogen-fueled chemosynthesis."
This discovery provides a natural
laboratory for studying links between hydrogen emissions and primitive life's
emergence. Alkaline, hydrogen-rich fluids like those at Kunlun are thought to
mirror early Earth's chemical environment.
The Kunlun hydrothermal system not only expands our knowledge of deep-sea hydrogen processes, but also opens new avenues for identifying untapped submarine hydrogen resources, the researchers noted.
Source: Rare deep-sea hydrothermal system discovered in western Pacific produces massive hydrogen emissions

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