Friday, September 05, 2025

 

Researchers discover massive geo-hydrogen source to the west of the Mussau Trench




Chinese Academy of Sciences Headquarters
Mechanism diagram showing the explosion process to form the pipe swarm in hydrothermal system 

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Mechanism diagram showing the explosion process to form the pipe swarm in hydrothermal system.

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Credit: Image by Prof. XIAO Yuanyuan et al.





Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the solar system. As a source of clean energy, hydrogen is well-suited for sustainable development, and Earth is a natural hydrogen factory. However, most hydrogen vents reported to date are small, and the geological processes responsible for hydrogen formation—as well as the quantities that can be preserved in geological settings—remain unclear.

To better understand the availability of geological hydrogen, researchers from the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IOCAS) and their collaborators discovered and analyzed a large pipe swarm—a cluster of cylindrical geological structures—with remnants of hydrogen hydrothermal activity on the east Caroline Plate, west of the Mussau Trench. The Mussau Trench is a fossil trench, meaning it is an ancient (started about 25 million years ago) and now inactive trench that ceased tectonic activity. The newly discovered pipe swarm, named "Kunlun," consists of pipes with diameters ranging from 450 to 1,800 meters.

The study was published in Science Advances on September 5.

Hydrothermal fluids—a mixture of heated water and dissolved minerals—spray out through small tubes, ranging in diameter from centimeters to sub-centimeters, along the sides of pockmarks (small, crater-like depressions) within large pipes, or through gaps or cracks in breccia piles (accumulations of angular rock fragments). Most of the breccias in the hydrothermal cracks are partially yellowish, likely due to microbial mats (layers of microorgAanisms).

Similar to other hydrothermal fields, hydrothermal biotas (communities of living organisms) are also found in the Kunlun pipe swarm. The scorpionfish—the ecosystem's apex predator—is commonly found in the Kunlun pipe swarm. Since the biomass of the apex predator should be far less than that of its prey, researchers expect a large amount of microbial mat to be found within piles of breccia at the bottom of the pipe swarm.

Additionally, more than 800 short-duration seismic events—small earthquakes—were detected over a period of 28 days along a 150-kilometer profile across the trench, indicating ongoing widespread active gas leakage across the entire Mussau Trench. Clumped nitrogen isotope analysis (a method for tracing gas origins) of a hydrothermal fluid sample revealed a dominant atmospheric gas component.

Previously reported hydrogen hydrothermal activity has been located near active plate margins, e.g., spreading ridges, or near active transform faults that expose mantle peridotite, such as the Lost City. In contrast, the large hydrogen-rich Kunlun hydrothermal fields are located about 80 kilometers from active plate margins.

These hydrothermal pipes have steep walls, with abundant breccias and several generations of smaller bowl-shaped pockmarks on the bottom, similar to those of kimberlite, indicating multiple generations of explosions. Using empirically derived blast energy estimates, the formation of such large pipes would require millions of tons of TNT.

The most likely source of energy for the formation of such large pipes is hydrogen. Compressed hydrogen can release a huge amount of energy. For example, one ton of hydrogen expanding adiabatically from 1500 bar to 400 bar—the pressure at the water depths of the Kunlun pipe swarm—can release the same amount of energy as 0.21 ton TNT. To form such pipes, a large amount of hydrogen would be needed. Alternatively, a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen would be highly explosive. One ton of hydrogen reacting with oxygen releases 143 GJ of heat, which is 150 times more energy than the amount released by physical expansion.

According to Prof. XIAO Yuanyuan, first author of the study, the results suggest a potentially huge amount of hydrogen may have been formed deep in the ocean lithospheric mantle. "It could be economically mineable in the future," said Prof. XIAO.

Eel-Inspired Robots? Study reveals how amphibious animals navigate tough terrain





University of Ottawa

Eel-Inspired Robots? Study reveals how amphibious animals navigate tough terrain 

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“Our study introduces a new model to explain the control of locomotion in elongated amphibious animals”

Emily Standen

— Associate Professor at uOttawa's Faculty of Science

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Credit: University of Ottawa






An international research team has unveiled significant findings regarding the locomotion of elongated amphibious animals. The researchers developed an innovative model that explains how elongated amphibious animals—such as eels—coordinate movement both in water and on land.

This collaborative effort, supported by the Human Frontier Science Program, involved researchers from the BioRob lab at EPFL in Switzerland, the Ishiguro Lab at Tohoku University in Japan, and the Standen Lab at University of Ottawa.

Emily Standen, Associate Professor at uOttawa's Faculty of Science and one of the lead Principal Investigators, led the biological side of the research. “Our study introduces a new model to explain the control of locomotion in elongated amphibious animals,” she says. “We aim to deepen our understanding of the neuromotor control systems used by animals that can adapt their movements between aquatic and terrestrial environments.”

The research, which has spanned multiple years, involved a comprehensive approach combining simulation modeling at Tohoku University, robotics testing at EPFL, and animal observation at the University of Ottawa. “In my lab, we observed eels to better understand their motor control systems and observe how brain signals, local spinal pattern generators and sensory feedback systems influence undulatory locomotion,” Professor Standen explains. “By using eels as a living model, we were able to guide the simulation and robotics models with biological data.”

The models in this study show that basic components of the motor system, like coordination in the nervous system, as well as pressure feedback and stretch feedback, allow for redundant coordination during swimming. This redundancy and the capacity of stretch feedback to allow the exploitation of heterogeneity in the environment to help move forward, may explain why elongated fish like the eel and lamprey can move in terrestrial environments. “These animals are remarkably resilient,” she notes. “Our models point to sensory feedback as the key to allowing them to maintain their locomotor performance.”

Bio-Inspired Robotics

Beyond animal biology, the findings could help engineers design flexible robots for challenging environments. “This research provides new ways of understanding neuromotor control in animals, which can have far-reaching implications for both scientific research and technological advancements,” says Professor Standen. Imagine robots that crawl, slither, or swim through tight spaces, using nature’s engineering to stay flexible and strong.

The study, Multisensory feedback makes swimming circuits robust against spinal transection and enables terrestrial crawling in elongate fish,” is now published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). It’s a leap forward in understanding movement and could inspire innovative robot designs in the future.