Mid-ocean ridge islands and seamounts

Working group on mid-ocean ridge islands and seamounts

Leading proponents and contacts:
Neil Mitchell (Manchester, UK)
Rui Quartau (Instituto Hidrográfico, Lisbon, Portugal)
Christoph Beier (
GeoZentrum Nordbayern, Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg; Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki)

WG co-proponents:
Telmo Morato (University of the Azores, Portugal)
David Barnes (British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, UK)
Eric Fielding (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, USA)
Robert Turnewitsch (Scottish Marine Institute, Oban, UK)
Pedro Afonso (University of the Azores, Portugal)
Christian Hübscher (University of Hamburg, Germany)
Katrin Linse (BAS, Cambridge, UK)
Ricardo Ramalho (Instituto Dom Luiz, Lisbon, Portugal)
Simon Morley (BAS, Cambridge, UK)
Ulrich Küppers (volcanology, LMU Munich, Germany)
José Madeira (University of Lisbon, Portugal)
Dmitry Aleynik (Scottish Assoc. of Marine Science, UK)
Chester Sands (British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, UK)
Christian Mohn (Aarhus University, Denmark)
Zhongwei Zhao (University of Manchester, UK)
Thor Hansteen (GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany)
Julia Crummy (British Geological Survey, Edinburgh, UK)
Michael Bizimis (University of Southern Carolina, USA)
Susumu Umino (Kanazawa University, Japan)
Bryndís Brandsdóttir (University of Iceland)
Jo Whittaker (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Carmen Gaina (University of Oslo, Norway)
Paraskevi Nomikou (University of Athens, Greece)
Christine Meyzen (University of Padova, Italy)
Cedric Hamelin (University of Bremen, Norway)
Kamesh Raju (National Institute of Oceanography, India)
DelWayne Bohnenstiehl (North Carolina State University, USA)

Scientific objectives:

The following is a preliminary set of questions to be addressed, which will be refined with the input of participants of the workshop and other meetings, and online contributions:

- How frequent is catastrophic failure in submarine slopes? How important are small compared with large movements in terms of net volume? What are the implications of these disturbances for ecosystem functioning on island slopes? Does it lead to significant burial of organic carbon? Can we link faults already mapped on land with signs of recent deformation in shallow-marine geophysical data to improve estimates of earthquake risk to local populations?
- Can we relate changes in plate tectonic regime with changes in magmatic extrusion in an individual magmatic system? How do mantle plumes affect a mid-ocean ridge where the mantle buoyancy flux is small? To what extents do tectonic processes affect formation and movement of melts? How do magmatic activity and styles of eruption relate to mantle composition, tectonic setting and local geology?
- How do fauna and flora vary from deep spreading centres to shallow depths of ocean island shelves and coasts, in response to varying temperature, pressure, substrate geology, currents and ambient light? How do seabed populations change with time after catastrophic events and with other changes, such as associated with climate change? How do topographically controlled fluid dynamics and sediment disturbances affect the distribution of Fe-Mn crusts on island and seamount slopes? How do the depths and distributions of sedimentary deposits on the shelves of volcanic islands relate to ocean physical conditions, in particular, waves? What roles do island shelves and, in particular, rhodolith beds have in carbon cycling and regulating water properties?

Final report from the InterRidge Workshop on Seamounts and Islands Associated With Mid-Ocean Ridges

Final Report from the Workshop of The InterRidge Working Group on Seamounts and Islands Associated With Mid-Ocean Ridges (19-21 September 2019)

Download the full text here

Short report from the workshop of the the Working Group on Seamounts and Islands associated with MOR

Between 19 and 21 September 2019 the Interridge Working Group on Seamounts and Islands associated with Mid-Ocean Ridges held its inaugural workshop in the Instituto Hidrográfico in Lisbon (Portugal). During the three days of the workshop the international participants discussed the main scientific and logistic challenges related to research of seamounts and islands.

Final schedule of the workshop on Seamounts and Islands near to Mid-Ocean Ridges

The final schedule for the September workshop of the Working Group on Seamounts and Islands near to Mid-Ocean Ridges is now available.

IR Workshop Schedule

InterRidge Workshop on Seamounts and Islands near Mid-Ocean Ridges: Provisional Schedule

The preliminary schedule for the September workshop of the Working Group on Seamounts and Islands near to Mid-Ocean Ridges held on 19-21 September 2019 in Lisbon.

1st workshop of the IR WG on MOR Islands and Seamounts - call for abstracts

The 1st international workshop organized by the InterRidge Working Group on MOR Islands and Seamounts will be held between 19 and 21 September 2019, in Lisbon (Portugal). The workshop aims to identify priority areas for research in all aspects of islands and seamounts located near to ridges, including geological, oceanographic and biological aspects. Participation in the workshop is open to anybody outside the WG and will involve an extended poster session on the first day.

Working Group on Seamounts and Islands - workshop information

The first workshop of the IR Working group on mid-ocean ridge islands and seamounts will be convened over three days (19 to 21 September 2019) in which participants will be able to exchange thoughts on priorities for research on seamounts and islands near to mid-ocean ridges. It will cover all geological, biology and oceanographic processes. The workshop will be hosted by the Instituto Hidrográfico, Lisbon (Portugal), within the beautiful grounds of a previous convent (Convento Trinas).

Working group on mid-ocean ridge islands and seamounts - proposal

Working group on mid-ocean ridge islands and seamounts

Motivation

First workshop on seamounts and islands near the spreading centres

Working Group on Mid-Ocean Ridge Islands and Seamounts has interests spanning all science from deep (mantle) to surface (oceanographic, biological) processes on seamounts and islands near the spreading centres and welcomes involvement from anyone wishing to join the workshop. Its first workshop will be held in Lisbon (Portugal) on 19-21 September 2019. This workshop will consider the state of current science on these areas and priorities for future research.