Site Navigation
Categories:
Hydrothermal vents
Economic geology
All articles with dead external links
Articles with dead external links since June 2008
Articles to be expanded since March 2008
All articles to be expanded

Summary Of: Hydrothermal vents

Hydrothermal vents are commonly found near... Hydrothermal vents are locally very common because the earth is both geologically active and has large amounts... hydrothermal vents may form features called... the areas around submarine hydrothermal vents are biologically more productive... Active hydrothermal vents are believed to exist on... and ancient hydrothermal vents have been speculated to exist on... The chemosynthetic ecosystem surrounding submarine hydrothermal vents were discovered along the Galapagos Rift... Hydrothermal vents in the deep ocean typically form along the... The water that issues from seafloor hydrothermal vents consists mostly of... Some hydrothermal vents form roughly cylindrical chimney structures... at hydrothermal vents from inorganic precursors... The examples of convergent evolution seen between distinct hydrothermal vents is seen as major support for the theory of natural selection and evolution as a... Although the discovery of hydrothermal vents is a relatively recent event in the history of science... Everything you wanted to know about hydrothermal vents and the deep sea... Images of Hydrothermal Vents in Indian Ocean...

Encyclodia Page On: Hydrothermal vents

These Are Links To Other Documents
A black smoker, a type of hydrothermal vent | | black smoker | Ocean habitats | Littoral zone | Intertidal zone | Neritic zone | Continental shelf | Kelp forests | Coral reefs | Fishing banks | Continental margin | Pelagic zone | Straits | Seamounts | Cold seeps | Demersal zone | Benthic zone | Aquatic ecosystems | Aquatic layers | Wild fisheries | Land habitats | fissure | geothermally | water | volcanically | tectonic plates | hot springs | fumaroles | geysers | Yellowstone National Park | United States | black smokers | Chemosynthetic | archaea | giant tube worms | clams | shrimp | Jupiter's | Europa | Mars | Red Sea | rift | East Pacific Rise | ALVIN | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute | New Zealand | Exclusive Economic Zone | seafloor massive sulfide deposits | lead | zinc | copper | Costa Rica | Medusa | Greek mythology | White smokers at Champagne Vent on Dominica. | | Dominica | Mid-ocean ridges | East Pacific Rise | Mid-Atlantic Ridge | tectonic plates | sea water | magma | meteoric water | ground water | brines | supercritical | critical point | Oregon | anhydrite | Sulfides | copper | iron | zinc | black smokers | Fiji | iron | Tube worms feeding at base of a black smoker. | | Tube worms | black smoker | chemosynthesis | amphipods | copepods | snails | shrimp | crabs | tube worms | fish | octopuses | food chain | annelids | gastropods | crustaceans | bivalves | life originated | hemoglobin | Hemoglobin | Eel City | eels | Nafanua volcanic cone | American Samoa | fauna | snail armored with scales | Pompeii worm (Alvinella Pompejana) | | talk page | requests for expansion | Thomas Gold | abiogenic petroleum origin | The Deep Hot Biosphere | Science Magazine | Lost City (hydrothermal field) | Günter Wächtershäuser | Iron-sulfur world theory | originated | seafloor massive sulfide deposits | Mt Isa | Queensland, Australia | Bismarck Archipelago | Kermadec Islands | Placer Dome | Barrick Gold | manganese nodules | Soviet submarine K-129 | Glomar Explorer | Howard Hughes | Project Jennifer | 2006 | 05-22 | 2006 | 07-06 | dead link | doi | 1998 | 12-01 | 2006 | 07-07 | Chemical & Engineering News | The Deep Hot Biosphere | ISBN 0387952535 | 17 October | 2005 | Black smoker | Cold seep | Fumarole | Geyser | Hot springs | Lost City | Origin of life | Robert Ballard | Submarine volcano | Black smoker ecosystem | Wikimedia Commons | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution | New Scientist | Categories | Hydrothermal vents | Economic geology | All articles with dead external links | Articles with dead external links since June 2008 | Articles to be expanded since March 2008 | All articles to be expanded |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hydrothermal vents".