Autor/a

Camilli, Richard

Nomikou, Paraskevi

Escartín, Javier

Ridao Rodríguez, Pere

Mallios, Angelos

Kilias, Stephanos P.

Argyraki, Ariadne

Andreani, Muriel

Ballu, Valerie

Campos Dausà, Ricard

Deplus, Christine

Gabsi, Taoufic

García Campos, Rafael

Grácias, Nuno Ricardo Estrela

Hurtós Vilarnau, Natàlia

Magí Carceller, Lluís

Mével, Catherine

Moreira, Manuel

Palomeras Rovira, Narcís

Pot, Olivier

Ribas Romagós, David

Ruzié, Lorraine

Sakellariou, Dimitris

Fecha de publicación

2015-07-16



Resumen

Natural CO2 releases from shallow marine hydrothermal vents are assumed to mix into the water column, and not accumulate into stratified seafloor pools. We present newly discovered shallow subsea pools located within the Santorini volcanic caldera of the Southern Aegean Sea, Greece, that accumulate CO2 emissions from geologic reservoirs. This type of hydrothermal seafloor pool, containing highly concentrated CO2, provides direct evidence of shallow benthic CO2 accumulations originating from sub-seafloor releases. Samples taken from within these acidic pools are devoid of calcifying organisms, and channel structures among the pools indicate gravity driven flow, suggesting that seafloor release of CO2 at this site may preferentially impact benthic ecosystems. These naturally occurring seafloor pools may provide a diagnostic indicator of incipient volcanic activity and can serve as an analog for studying CO2 leakage and benthic accumulations from subsea carbon capture and storage sites

Tipo de documento

Artículo
Versión publicada
peer-reviewed

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Fons marins; Ocean bottom; Anhídrid carbònic; Carbon dioxide

Publicado por

Nature Publishing Group

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Derechos

Attribution 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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