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Dive into the research topics where Oliver Schmale is active.

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Featured researches published by Oliver Schmale.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2007

Young volcanism and related hydrothermal activity at 5°S on the slow‐spreading southern Mid‐Atlantic Ridge

Karsten M. Haase; Sven Petersen; Andrea Koschinsky; Richard Seifert; C. W. Devey; R. Keir; Klas Lackschewitz; Bernd Melchert; Mirjam Perner; Oliver Schmale; J. Süling; Nicole Dubilier; Frank Zielinski; S. Fretzdorff; Dieter Garbe-Schönberg; Ulrike Westernströer; Christopher R. German; Timothy M. Shank; Dana R. Yoerger; O. Giere; Jan Kuever; H. Marbler; J. Mawick; Christian Mertens; Uwe Stöber; Maren Walter; C. Ostertag‐Henning; Holger Paulick; Marc Peters; Harald Strauss

The effect of volcanic activity on submarine hydrothermal systems has been well documented along fast- and intermediate-spreading centers but not from slow-spreading ridges. Indeed, volcanic eruptions are expected to be rare on slow-spreading axes. Here we report the presence of hydrothermal venting associated with extremely fresh lava flows at an elevated, apparently magmatically robust segment center on the slow-spreading southern Mid-Atlantic Ridge near 5°S. Three high-temperature vent fields have been recognized so far over a strike length of less than 2 km with two fields venting phase-separated, vapor-type fluids. Exit temperatures at one of the fields reach up to 407°C, at conditions of the critical point of seawater, the highest temperatures ever recorded from the seafloor. Fluid and vent field characteristics show a large variability between the vent fields, a variation that is not expected within such a limited area. We conclude from mineralogical investigations of hydrothermal precipitates that vent-fluid compositions have evolved recently from relatively oxidizing to more reducing conditions, a shift that could also be related to renewed magmatic activity in the area. Current high exit temperatures, reducing conditions, low silica contents, and high hydrogen contents in the fluids of two vent sites are consistent with a shallow magmatic source, probably related to a young volcanic eruption event nearby, in which basaltic magma is actively crystallizing. This is the first reported evidence for direct magmatic-hydrothermal interaction on a slow-spreading mid-ocean ridge.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2009

Isotope fractionation and mixing in methane plumes from the Logatchev hydrothermal field

Robin S. Keir; Oliver Schmale; Richard Seifert; Jürgen Sültenfuß

As methane is consumed in the deep sea, its 13C/12C ratio progressively increases because of kinetic isotope fractionation. Many submarine hydrothermal vents emit methane with carbon isotope ratios that are higher than those of background methane in the surrounding ocean. Since the latter exists at low concentrations, mixing of background methane with vent fluid tends to decrease the 13C/12C ratio as concentration decreases, opposite to the trend produced by consumption. We investigated CH4 concentration and δ13C together with δ3He in plumes from the Logatchev hydrothermal field (LHF) located at 14°45′N, 45°W, which generates relatively heavy methane (δ13C ≈ −13‰) by serpentinization of ultramafic rock. The measured methane and δ3He were well correlated at high concentrations, indicating a CH4/3He ratio of 1 × 108 in the vent fluids. These tracer distributions were also simulated with an advection-diffusion model in which methane consumption only occurs above a certain threshold concentration. We utilized δ3He to calculate the methane remaining in solution after oxidation, f, and the deviation of δ13C from the value expected from mixing alone, Δδ13C. Both in the model and in the data, the entire set of Δδ13C values are not correlated with log f, which is due to continuous oxidation within the plume while mixing with background seawater. A linear relationship, however, is found in the model for methane at concentrations sufficiently above background, and many of the samples with elevated CH4 north of LHF exhibit a linear trend of Δδ13C versus log f as well. From this trend, the kinetic isotope fractionation factor in the LHF plumes appears to be about 1.015. This value is somewhat higher than found in some other deep-sea studies, but it is lower than found in laboratory incubation experiments.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

The Baltic Sea Tracer Release Experiment: 1. Mixing rates

Peter Holtermann; Lars Umlauf; Toste Tanhua; Oliver Schmale; Gregor Rehder; Joanna J. Waniek

In this study, results from the Baltic Sea Tracer Release Experiment (BATRE) are described, in which deep water mixing rates and mixing processes in the central Baltic Sea were investigated. In September 2007, an inert tracer gas (CF3SF5) was injected at approximately 200 m depth in the Gotland Basin, and the subsequent spreading of the tracer was observed during six surveys until February 2009. These data describe the diapycnal and lateral mixing during a stagnation period without any significant deep water renewal due to inflow events. As one of the main results, vertical mixing rates were found to dramatically increase after the tracer had reached the lateral boundaries of the basin, suggesting boundary mixing as the key process for basin-scale vertical mixing. Basin-scale vertical diffusivities were of the order of 10−5 m2 s−1 (about 1 order of magnitude larger than interior diffusivities) with evidence for a seasonal and vertical variability. In contrast to tracer experiments in the open ocean, the basin geometry (hypsography) was found to have a crucial impact on the vertical tracer spreading. The e-folding time scale for deep water renewal due to mixing was slightly less than 2 years, the time scale for the lateral homogenization of the tracer patch was of the order of a few months. Key Points: Mixing rates in the Gotland Basin are dominated by boundary mixing processes; The time scale for Gotland Basin deep water renewal is approximately 2 years; Mixing rates determined from the tracer CF3SF5


Geophysical Research Letters | 2010

Distribution of methane in the water column of the Baltic Sea

Oliver Schmale; J. Schneider von Deimling; W. Gülzow; G. Nausch; J. J. Waniek; Gregor Rehder

The distribution of dissolved methane in the water column of the Baltic Sea was extensively investigated. A strong correlation between the vertical density stratification, the distribution of oxygen, hydrogen sulfide, and methane has been identified. A widespread release of methane from the seafloor is indicated by increasing methane concentrations with water depth. The deep basins in the central Baltic Sea show the strongest methane enrichments in stagnant anoxic water bodies (max. 1086 nM and 504 nM, respectively), with a pronounced decrease towards the pelagic redoxcline and slightly elevated surface water concentrations (saturation values of 206% and 120%, respectively). In general the more limnic basins in the northern part of the Baltic are characterized by lower water column methane concentrations and surface water saturation values close to the atmospheric equilibrium (between 106% and 116%). In contrast, the shallow Western Baltic Sea is characterized by high saturation values up to 746%.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2006

Methanotrophic microbial communities associated with bubble plumes above gas seeps in the Black Sea

Carsten J. Schubert; Edith Durisch-Kaiser; Christian P. Holzner; Lucia Klauser; Bernhard Wehrli; Oliver Schmale; Jens Greinert; Daniel Frank Mcginnis; Marc De Batist; Rolf Kipfer

Bubbles evolving from active gas seeps can be traced by hydroacoustic imaging up to 1000 m high in the Black Sea water column. Although methane concentrations are not distinguishable between the water column above the deep seep and reference sites, atmospheric noble gas measurements clearly show the constant input of gases (mainly methane) via seepage into the Black Sea. Archaea (ANME-1, ANME-2) and methanotrophic bacteria detected with specific 16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes are related to active gas seeps in the oxic and anoxic water column. It is suggested that methane seeps have a much greater influence on the Black Sea methane budget than previously acknowledged and that ANME-1 and ANME-2 are injected via gas bubbles from the sediment into the anoxic water column mediating methane oxidation. Our results show further that only minor amounts of methane evolving from Black Sea gas seeps reach the atmosphere due to the very effective microbial barrier. Hence only major thermodynamically and/or tectonically triggered gas hydrate dissociation has the potential to induce rapid climate changes as suggested by the “clathrate gun hypothesis.”


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Dense bottom gravity currents and their impact on pelagic methanotrophy at oxic/anoxic transition zones

Oliver Schmale; Stefan Krause; Peter Holtermann; Nicole C. Power Guerra; Lars Umlauf

We show that inflows of oxygenated waters into sulfidic layers have a strong impact on biogeochemical transformation at oxic/anoxic transition zones. Taking the pelagic methane dynamics in the Gotland Basin as an example, we performed our studies when one of the largest inflows ever recorded entered the Baltic Sea in March 2015. An inflowing gravity current transported oxic waters into the sulfidic deep layers and freshly generated a near-bottom secondary redox interface. At the upper slope, where the inflowing water masses were vigorously turbulent and the main and secondary redox interfaces in close contact to each other, methane oxidation rates inside the transition zone were found to be higher compared to the weakly turbulent basin interior. At the main redox interface in the basin center, lateral intrusions of oxygenated waters into intermediate water depth may have stimulated the growth of the methanotrophic community and their activity.


Archive | 2006

RECENT STUDIES ON SOURCES AND SINKS OF METHANE IN THE BLACK SEA

Carsten J. Schubert; Edith Durisch-Kaiser; Lucia Klauser; Francisco Vazquez; Bernhard Wehrli; Christian P. Holzner; Rolf Kipfer; Oliver Schmale; Jens Greinert; Marcel M. M. Kuypers

This study focuses on the influence of gas seepage on methane sources and sinks, aerobic and anaerobic oxidation of methane and the mediating microbial organisms in the Black Sea. We present data from two cruises that took place in 2001 and 2003. Seven stations (two from the shelf, four from the upper and lower slope, and one from the central basin) were compared with respect to methane concentration and isotope signature. The stations differed in methane concentration depending on the location on the slope. A strong change in the concentration and isotopic composition of methane was observed below the oxic/anoxic interface, coinciding with increased levels of archaeal biomarkers (archaeol and sn-2-hydroxy-archaeol). Concentration and isotopic composition of methane in the water column and sediments indicate that sediments from the shelf, slope, and deep basin are only minor sources of methane. The main methane sources are seeps located on the shelf and upper slope, but also in the deep basin. The comparison of two shelf stations with and without methane seepage showed a difference in methane concentrations, isotopic composition and oxidation rates, but the presence of similar methanotrophic microbial assemblages. Also two deep stations at a seep and outside of a seep area were compared, but here methane concentrations and oxidation rates were not different from each other. Anaerobic methane oxidizers (ANME-1 and ANME-2 group) were observed at both stations with slightly higher cell counts at the seep station.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2012

Fluid and gas fluxes from the Logatchev hydrothermal vent area

Oliver Schmale; Maren Walter; Jens Schneider von Deimling; Jürgen Sültenfuß; Sharon L. Walker; Gregor Rehder; Robin S. Keir

The Logatchev hydrothermal field at 14°45′N on the MAR is characterized by gas plumes that are enriched in methane and helium compared to the oceanic background. We investigated CH4 concentration and δ13C together with δ3He in the water column of that region. These data and turbidity measurements indicate that apart from the known vent fields, another vent site exists northeast of the vent field Logatchev 1. The distribution of methane and 3He concentrations along two sections were used in combination with current measurements from lowered acoustic Doppler current profilers (LADCP) to calculate the horizontal plume fluxes of these gases. According to these examinations 0.02 μmol s−1 of 3He and 0.21 mol s−1 of methane are transported in a plume that flows into a southward direction in the central part of the valley. Based on 3He measurements of vent fluid (22 ± 6 pM), we estimate a total vent flux in this region of about 900 L s−1 and a total flux of CH4 of 3.2 mol s−1.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2008

Hunting a New Ocean Tracer

Lars Umlauf; Toste Tanhua; Joanna J. Waniek; Oliver Schmale; Peter Holtermann; Gregor Rehder

A useful method to obtain integrated estimates of vertical mixing in the ocean over a long period of time and a large area is the release of a tracer. Recent large-scale tracer release experiments conducted in the Southern Ocean, such as the Diapycnal and Isopycnal Mixing Experiment (DIMES [see Gille et al., 2007]), and in the equatorial Atlantic will rely on a new tracer chemical called trifluoromethyl sulfur pentafluoride (SF5CF3), which is likely to become a standard for future experiments. Here we report results from the first injection of pure SF5CF3 into the ocean, which was carried out in a deep basin of the Baltic Sea. Using the Baltic Sea as a natural laboratory for the investigation of physical mixing processes, this pilot study aims at improving our understanding of one of the most puzzling mixing properties in stratified ocean basins: Almost independent of the basins size, the basin-scale vertical mixing rates exceed the rates inferred from local turbulence measurements in the basin center by approximately 1 order of magnitude [see, e.g., Ledwell and Bratkovich, 1995].


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2016

A bioreactor approach to investigate the linkage between methane oxidation and nitrate/nitrite reduction in the pelagic oxic-anoxic transition zone of the central Baltic Sea

G. Jakobs; Matthias Labrenz; Gregor Rehder; Susanna Hietanen; Katrin Kießlich; Angela Vogts; Martin Blumenberg; Oliver Schmale

Evidence of aerobic methane oxidation coupled to denitrification has been provided for different freshwater environments, whereas the significance of this process for the marine realm has not been adequately investigated. The goal of this study was to investigate the methane-related reduction of nitrate/nitrite in a marine environment (salinity 8.5). A water sample was collected from the oxic-anoxic transition zone of the Gotland Deep (central Baltic Sea) and the microorganisms contained therein were cultivated in a bioreactor under hypoxic conditions (0.5 µM O2). To enrich the microorganisms involved in the coupled process the bioreactor was continuously sparged with methane as the sole energy and carbon source and simultaneously supplied with a nutrient solution rich in nitrate and nitrite. The bioreactor experiment showed a relationship between the turnover of methane and the concomitant concentration decrease of nitrite and nitrate at the early stage of the experiment. This relationship indicates the role of methanotrophs, which may support heterotrophic denitrifiers by the release of organic compounds as an energy source. Besides, a mixture of uncultured microorganisms, aerobic methanotrophic and heterotrophic denitrifying bacteria were identified in the enrichment culture. Microbial incorporation of nitrite and methane was proven on the cellular and gene levels via 15NO2- / 13CH4 incubation experiments and subsequent analyses with nano secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) and stable isotope probing (SIP). The NanoSIMS showed the incorporation of 15N in almost all the bacteria and in 9% of those there was a concomitant enrichment in 13C. The relatively low abundance of methane-consuming bacteria in the bioreactor was further reflected in specific fatty acids indicative for type I methanotrophic bacteria. Based on pmoA gene analyses, this bacterium is different from the one that was identified as the only key player of methane oxidation in previous studies in the Gotland Deep, indicating the existence of other subordinate methanotrophic bacteria at that site. The results provide the first indications for the predisposition of a methane-related reduction of nitrate/nitrite under hypoxic conditions in the marine realm, supporting the assumption of an interaction between methanotrophic and denitrifying bacteria which hitherto has only been described for fresh water environments.

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Gregor Rehder

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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Lars Umlauf

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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Matthias Labrenz

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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Volker Thiel

University of Göttingen

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Peter Holtermann

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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