DocumentCode
375922
Title
Applications of human occupied vehicles at hydrocarbon seeps and vents in the Gulf of Mexico
Author
Shepard, Andrew N.
Author_Institution
Nat. Undersea Res. Center, North Carolina Univ., Wilmington, NC, USA
Volume
2
fYear
2001
fDate
2001
Firstpage
799
Abstract
For the past 15 years, Human Occupied Vehicles (HOV), or research submersibles, have been used to explore and investigate hydrocarbon (oil and gas) seeps and vents (HSV) in the northern Gulf of Mexico. These studies complement the rich history of investigation of chemosynthetic communities around the globe, and are particularly timely in view of increasing interest in oil and gas reserves beneath the continental slope. HOV research results have included: first ecological and physiological studies of HSV chemosynthetic communities in the Gulf, discovery of many new species of deep-sea microbes and invertebrates, new knowledge of the extent and behavior of seafloor gas hydrates, and description of the patterns of seepage and mechanisms that provide hydrocarbons to the seafloor. This paper is a summary of some of these discoveries and HOV technologies that made them possible
Keywords
geology; oceanic crust; oceanographic regions; oceanographic techniques; oceanography; seafloor phenomena; Gulf of Mexico; Louisiana; Texas; USA; United States; chemoautotrophic bacteria; chemosynthetic communities; continental slope; deep sea; gas hydrate; gas seep; human occupied vehicle; hydrocarbon seep; invertebrate; manned vehicle; marine biology; marine geology; measurement technique; microbes; ocean; oceanic crust; oil seep; research submersible; seafloor geology; seepage; species; submarine; Carbon dioxide; History; Humans; Hydrocarbons; Marine technology; Oceans; Petroleum; Sea floor; Underwater vehicles; Vents;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS, 2001. MTS/IEEE Conference and Exhibition
Conference_Location
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN
0-933957-28-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.2001.968222
Filename
968222
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