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A second sampling
leg in 2002, Leg
201, will core and recover deep-sea sediments at a series of
sites in the eastern equatorial Pacific, the Peru Basin, and the
Peru Margin. The purpose of Leg 201 is to explore the distribution,
activities, community structure, phylogenetic affinities, and global
biogeochemical consequences of microbial communities buried in deep-sea
sediments. Subsurface sedimentary environments to be explored during
Leg 201 include (1) sulfate reducing, sulfate depleted methanogenic,
and sulfate-reducing methanotrophic zones of the Peru coastal margin;
(2) open-ocean sulfate-rich sediments where sulfate reduction, methanogenesis,
and methanotrophy apparently co-occur (equatorial Pacific); and
(3) open-ocean sulfate-rich sediments where manganese reduction
occurs (Peru Basin). The coastal-margin sites will include both
shallow-water sites where all of the methane is present as free
gas and a deep-water site where methane hydrates occur.
This cruise
will address several fundamental questions about the deeply buried
biosphere. These include: (1) Are different sedimentary geochemical
regimes characterized by very different microbial communities—or
merely by shifts in the dominating organisms and the level of community
activity? (2) How does hydrologic flow through deeply buried sediments
and possibly through basement rock affect subsurface microbial communities
and their activities? (3) To what extent do past oceanographic conditions
affect microbial communities now buried in deep-sea sediments?
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