Ken McNamara provides a very interesting and
stimulating review of modern Australian stromatolites (Geoscientist 19.12 December 2009). He mentions that some of the stromatolites are closely related to hot springs (Yellowstone). Here, he actually touches upon a cruicial aspect of the stromatolite enigma – their association with, not only hot springs, but all kinds of hydraulically focused fluid flow, i.e., ‘cold seeps’.
Because the substratum of stromatolites (including microbialites and other aquatic bioherms) is the poro-elastic soil, there is reason to suspect a seep-relationship. Soil, submerged in water (ocean and lake floors) consists of sand, silt, and clay, where the pores between the grains are saturated with water. In the intertidal zone, the soil is fully saturated only part of the time. In the context of bacterial and stromatolite growth, we suspect that seepage is a potent and stimulating process.
In this communication, we choose to define seepage as vertically focused fluid flow through the aquatic soil surface. Because the process of seepage is generally invisible it is often treated as a mere curiosity or as a rare and insignificant process. In fact, seepage is an ubiquitous process occurring inside large porous or semi-porous geological bodies containing fluids (liquids and gases). This is because the three phases of the body (solid, liquid, gas) behaves differently to external and internal forces.
The fluid movements inside a low permeable marine or lacustrine sediment, are governed by pressure-, temperature-, and chemical gradients. Movement of liquids, gases, and even solid particles are the result of these gradients, some of which are transient (e.g., tidal fluctuations). Seepage occurs under-ground and is rarely observed (i.e., micro-seepage). It is a physical and physico-chemical process, and has existed on Earth from long before the advent of stromatolites. In our view, the process is expected not only to be beneficial, but in many cases cruicial for the well-being of surface-dwelling micro-organisms, including some of the proto-stromatolites.
When discussing seepage, we therefore, face a severe dilemma. As a generally invisible process, it is notoriously difficult to document. Seepage belongs to the complex and diverse science of Hydrology. To document where and how such seepage occurs, careful monitoring and special instrumentation is needed. The effects of seepage (often inferred) are, generally, much easier to document. When detecting seep locations on the seafloor, it is often their acoustic effects in the water column and on the seafloor, together with their geochemical signatures and effects on topography and the local biology we can map. These features are the tell-tale manifestations of the seep processes. As seepage relies on delicate balances between various sources of fluids (e.g., aquifers), un-careful use of drilling techniques may destroy the sub-surface hydraulic balance of seepage.
Thus, a drill-hole in the wrong location can cause the puncturing and deflation of an over-pressured system. The character of aquatic seeps vary according to 1) fluid type, 2) chemistry, 3) sediment conditions, 4) presence or not of under-ground gas, and 5) the local and regional hydrological system. This means that nearly all seeps have their own specific character, which affects all biological utilization of the seep. The catalogue of seep manifestations in the ocean is, therefore, large and varied, ranging from craters (pockmarks), to mud volcanoes, and hydrothermal vents (Judd and Hovland, 2007).
As a curiosity, it is interesting to know that ice on lakes and seawater is a good recorder of seepage. Thus, during the current severe winter in Norway, it was easy to see the effects of seepage on the ice of lakes and seawater (see Figures 1 and 2).