Seafloor features such as sulfide mounds and chimneys are prominent evidence of hydrothermal activity. These features, whether active or dormant, are just the tip of the iceberg, so to speak; much of the “plumbing” of hydrothermal systems exists beneath the seafloor surface.
Mineral-laden water emerging from a hydrothermal vent
Hydrothermal vent chimney from the southwest Pacific Ocean
Ferromanganese crust from the south Pacific Ocean
Ferromanganese nodule being sampled from the North Atlantic seafloor
Researching seafloor mineral resources that occur within the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone and areas beyond national jurisdictions.
Research Overview
The Global Marine Mineral Resources project researches deep ocean minerals within the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone and throughout the Earth’s oceans. Our research concerns the setting, genesis, and metal enrichment processes of mineral deposits, the relationship between marine minerals related and deep-sea biota, and the potential geochemical footprint of any seafloor mining. We aim to provide stakeholders with the best available science regarding potential resources and environmental impacts associated with accessing those resources.
Project objectives include:
- Geochemical characterization of mineral samples, including mineralogy and metal concentrations, and their variability regionally and globally
- Correlation of oceanographic and geographic parameters with mineralogy and metal content to elucidate the controls on mineral formation and element enrichment, and to map prospective mineral regions within the global ocean
- Investigation of mineral stability and metal mobility with exposure to seawater over time through experimental geochemistry to constrain geochemical effects of mineral disturbance
- Collaboration with biologists to determine associations between minerals and the biological communities which inhabit and surround them
Our findings inform stakeholders, including the public, government, industry, academics and NGOs, about mineral wealth and its environmental setting within the vast offshore territory of the U.S. and helps them determine which regions and deposits may warrant further research.
Seafloor Mineral Deposits
There are a wide variety of deep-sea mineral categories; however, our team focuses on those marine mineral categories that have the greatest resource potential.
Seafloor pavements and encrusted rocks are known as ferromanganese crusts (also called cobalt-rich crusts). These crusts grow very slowly, at several millimeters per million years, and precipitate onto exposed rock surfaces throughout the global ocean—they do not form where sediment blankets the seafloor. In the oldest parts of the seafloor in the northwest Pacific Ocean, some crusts have been forming for over 70 million years and can be over 20 centimeters thick. Crusts act as a sponge of sorts, adsorbing metals and other elements from seawater over these long periods of time, and are especially enriched in cobalt, manganese, rare metals such as tellurium, precious metals such as platinum, and rare earth elements.
Over millions of years, spheroidal rocks called manganese nodules (or polymetallic nodules) form atop sediment covering the abyssal plains of the global ocean. These nodules form by the accretion of iron and manganese oxides around a tiny nucleus, such as a large grain of sand, a shark tooth, or older nodule fragment. Manganese nodules are usually golf-ball to baseball size and grow very slowly like ferromanganese crusts if they acquire all their metals directly from seawater, or they grow faster if they also acquire their metals from the pore-waters of the sediment on which they sit. Nodules are currently of great interest for mining due to high concentrations of manganese, nickel, copper, and sometimes lithium, as well as the straightforward nature of quantifying their distribution and density.
Seafloor massive sulfides (also called polymetallic sulfides) form at hydrothermal vents when seawater penetrates the ocean’s crust and becomes heated and chemically modified through interaction with crustal rocks and, sometimes, by input of magmatic fluids. The hot hydrothermal fluids then rise back toward the seafloor and precipitate minerals as they cool along flow paths and upon mixing with seawater. A wide variety of minerals form through hydrothermal activity, but seafloor massive sulfides are formed from reduced sulfur and may be enriched in copper, zinc, iron, gold, and silver. Hydrothermal vents exist along mid-ocean ridge spreading centers, extensional systems associated with subduction zones, volcanoes, and intraplate hotspots. Yet, seafloor massive sulfides likely extend beyond these active hydrothermal zones. We know the minerals persist after removal from the heat source because of the presence of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits on land.
Marine phosphorites primarily occur along continental margins where upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich, deep water is strong. These areas include the Peru-Chile margin, on plateaus such as Chatham Rise offshore New Zealand, and the Blake-Bahamas Plateau off the southeast United States; but they can also form on seamounts where ferromanganese crusts grow. Phosphorites form when abundant phosphate in seawater replaces carbonate in calcareous sediments or precipitates in situ as apatite to form hardgrounds, phosphatic nodules, or cements in breccias of multiple rock types. Marine phosphorites are sources of phosphate used as fertilizer for agriculture and phosphoric acid in the food industry. Phosphorites can also contain high concentrations of valuable, heavy, rare earth elements that may be economically recoverable and can contain up to 4% fluorine.
Marine Mining Context
The oceans cover nearly three quarters of the surface of the earth, and in the U.S., the area of seafloor comprising the Exclusive Economic Zone is greater than the land area on shore. This enormous ocean realm hosts many types of minerals that differ from those occurring terrestrially. Ferromanganese crusts, manganese nodules, phosphorites, and hydrothermal vent deposits, which occur from the Arctic to the Antarctic, are enriched in many metals including those currently deemed societally critical. It is therefore important to understand these minerals and the role they may play as future mineral resources.
People around the world demand metals and mineral resources for many uses, including technology, electronics, and green energy infrastructure such as wind turbines and electric cars. Critical minerals are defined as those that are essential to the economic and national security of a nation but that have a supply-chain vulnerable to disruption. In 2018, the Department of the Interior released a list of 54 critical minerals that was further refined to 35 based on Executive Order 13817, with the list to be reconsidered biannually. Across the USGS, research is underway to define and prioritize focus areas throughout the United States with resource potential for these 35 critical minerals. The Global Marine Mineral Resources project specifically informs the marine component.
To date, there is no mining of deep-sea minerals. In Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction, any marine mining is governed by the International Seabed Authority, which is currently drafting exploitation regulations. The Global Marine Mineral Resources project has provided scientific advice to the U.S. State Department and has served as a member of the U.S. delegation to the International Seabed Authority as an Observer Nation for the last 20 years. Japan completed equipment testing offshore of Okinawa in the fall of 2017, recovering 4 tons of metal sulfide. For comparison, it has been suggested that an economic seafloor massive sulfide (SMS) mine would recover on the order of 1 million tons of metal sulfide minerals. There is one permitted mine for copper, gold, and silver offshore Papua New Guinea, on 0.1 square kilometer of seafloor; and the Cook Islands are revising regulations for manganese nodules mining.
Below are other studies related to this project.
USGS Law of the Sea
Resources: EXPRESS
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Major and trace element geochemistry and mineralogy of ferromanganese crusts from seamounts within the Tuvalu Exclusive Economic Zone
Marine mineral geochemical data - Part One: Pacific Ocean USGS-affiliated historical data
Mineralogy, rare earth elements, and strontium isotopic composition of phosphorites and phosphatized rocks from the Rio Grande Rise, south Atlantic Ocean
Measurements of zinc, oxygen, and pH, from sphalerite and ZnS oxidation in seawater
Sorbed-water (H2O-) corrected chemistry for ferromanganese crust samples from the western equatorial Pacific Ocean
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
Seafloor features such as sulfide mounds and chimneys are prominent evidence of hydrothermal activity. These features, whether active or dormant, are just the tip of the iceberg, so to speak; much of the “plumbing” of hydrothermal systems exists beneath the seafloor surface.
Critical to scientific operations aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition is the submersible robots Sentry and Jason. Owned and operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI), these robots allow researchers to observe seafloor features and collect data from depths seldom visited by humans.
Critical to scientific operations aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition is the submersible robots Sentry and Jason. Owned and operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI), these robots allow researchers to observe seafloor features and collect data from depths seldom visited by humans.
For scientists aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition, obtaining sediment cores or deep-sea biological and geological samples after a Jason dive is only the beginning.
For scientists aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition, obtaining sediment cores or deep-sea biological and geological samples after a Jason dive is only the beginning.
Embarking on a three-week deep-sea research expedition requires a lot of preparation. For this expedition to Escanaba Trough, U.S. Geological Survey scientists and partners spend the first few days in port, building their laboratory space aboard the research vessel Thomas G. Thompson.
Embarking on a three-week deep-sea research expedition requires a lot of preparation. For this expedition to Escanaba Trough, U.S. Geological Survey scientists and partners spend the first few days in port, building their laboratory space aboard the research vessel Thomas G. Thompson.
Research Oceanographer Kira Mizell studies change in ocean chemistry by collecting marine minerals, looking for insights into past climate conditions and geologic history.
Research Oceanographer Kira Mizell studies change in ocean chemistry by collecting marine minerals, looking for insights into past climate conditions and geologic history.
During a recent dive on the New England Seamount chain off the North Atlantic coast, researchers aboard the NOAA Ocean Exploration Expedition, North Atlantic Stepping Stones, discovered a marine geological feature known as a ferromanganese (Fe-Mn) nodule field in the saddle between two peaks of Gosnold Seamount.
During a recent dive on the New England Seamount chain off the North Atlantic coast, researchers aboard the NOAA Ocean Exploration Expedition, North Atlantic Stepping Stones, discovered a marine geological feature known as a ferromanganese (Fe-Mn) nodule field in the saddle between two peaks of Gosnold Seamount.
Join USGS researchers Jason Chaytor and Kira Mizell as they virtually participate in a NOAA Ocean Exploration expedition to the depths of the North Atlantic.
Join USGS researchers Jason Chaytor and Kira Mizell as they virtually participate in a NOAA Ocean Exploration expedition to the depths of the North Atlantic.
Below are publications associated with this project.
Crystal chemistry of thallium in marine ferromanganese deposits
Deep-ocean polymetallic nodules and cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts in the global ocean: New sources for critical metals
Estimates of metals contained in abyssal manganese nodules and ferromanganese crusts in the global ocean based on regional variations and genetic types of nodules
Geochemical insights into formation of enigmatic ironstones from Rio Grande rise, South Atlantic Ocean
Miocene phosphatization of rocks from the summit of Rio Grande Rise, Southwest Atlantic Ocean
Extent of impact of deep-sea nodule mining midwater plumes is influenced by sediment loading, turbulence and thresholds
Carbonate-hosted microbial communities are prolific and pervasive methane oxidizers at geologically diverse marine methane seep sites
Changes in seabed mining
Ocean floor manganese deposits
Sphalerite oxidation in seawater with covellite: Implications for seafloor massive sulfide deposits and mine waste
The effects of phosphatization on the mineral associations and speciation of Pb in ferromanganese crusts
Research is needed to inform environmental management of hydrothermally inactive and extinct polymetallic sulfide (PMS) deposits
Below are news stories associated with this project.
Researching seafloor mineral resources that occur within the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone and areas beyond national jurisdictions.
Research Overview
The Global Marine Mineral Resources project researches deep ocean minerals within the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone and throughout the Earth’s oceans. Our research concerns the setting, genesis, and metal enrichment processes of mineral deposits, the relationship between marine minerals related and deep-sea biota, and the potential geochemical footprint of any seafloor mining. We aim to provide stakeholders with the best available science regarding potential resources and environmental impacts associated with accessing those resources.
Project objectives include:
- Geochemical characterization of mineral samples, including mineralogy and metal concentrations, and their variability regionally and globally
- Correlation of oceanographic and geographic parameters with mineralogy and metal content to elucidate the controls on mineral formation and element enrichment, and to map prospective mineral regions within the global ocean
- Investigation of mineral stability and metal mobility with exposure to seawater over time through experimental geochemistry to constrain geochemical effects of mineral disturbance
- Collaboration with biologists to determine associations between minerals and the biological communities which inhabit and surround them
Our findings inform stakeholders, including the public, government, industry, academics and NGOs, about mineral wealth and its environmental setting within the vast offshore territory of the U.S. and helps them determine which regions and deposits may warrant further research.
Seafloor Mineral Deposits
There are a wide variety of deep-sea mineral categories; however, our team focuses on those marine mineral categories that have the greatest resource potential.
Seafloor pavements and encrusted rocks are known as ferromanganese crusts (also called cobalt-rich crusts). These crusts grow very slowly, at several millimeters per million years, and precipitate onto exposed rock surfaces throughout the global ocean—they do not form where sediment blankets the seafloor. In the oldest parts of the seafloor in the northwest Pacific Ocean, some crusts have been forming for over 70 million years and can be over 20 centimeters thick. Crusts act as a sponge of sorts, adsorbing metals and other elements from seawater over these long periods of time, and are especially enriched in cobalt, manganese, rare metals such as tellurium, precious metals such as platinum, and rare earth elements.
Over millions of years, spheroidal rocks called manganese nodules (or polymetallic nodules) form atop sediment covering the abyssal plains of the global ocean. These nodules form by the accretion of iron and manganese oxides around a tiny nucleus, such as a large grain of sand, a shark tooth, or older nodule fragment. Manganese nodules are usually golf-ball to baseball size and grow very slowly like ferromanganese crusts if they acquire all their metals directly from seawater, or they grow faster if they also acquire their metals from the pore-waters of the sediment on which they sit. Nodules are currently of great interest for mining due to high concentrations of manganese, nickel, copper, and sometimes lithium, as well as the straightforward nature of quantifying their distribution and density.
Seafloor massive sulfides (also called polymetallic sulfides) form at hydrothermal vents when seawater penetrates the ocean’s crust and becomes heated and chemically modified through interaction with crustal rocks and, sometimes, by input of magmatic fluids. The hot hydrothermal fluids then rise back toward the seafloor and precipitate minerals as they cool along flow paths and upon mixing with seawater. A wide variety of minerals form through hydrothermal activity, but seafloor massive sulfides are formed from reduced sulfur and may be enriched in copper, zinc, iron, gold, and silver. Hydrothermal vents exist along mid-ocean ridge spreading centers, extensional systems associated with subduction zones, volcanoes, and intraplate hotspots. Yet, seafloor massive sulfides likely extend beyond these active hydrothermal zones. We know the minerals persist after removal from the heat source because of the presence of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits on land.
Marine phosphorites primarily occur along continental margins where upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich, deep water is strong. These areas include the Peru-Chile margin, on plateaus such as Chatham Rise offshore New Zealand, and the Blake-Bahamas Plateau off the southeast United States; but they can also form on seamounts where ferromanganese crusts grow. Phosphorites form when abundant phosphate in seawater replaces carbonate in calcareous sediments or precipitates in situ as apatite to form hardgrounds, phosphatic nodules, or cements in breccias of multiple rock types. Marine phosphorites are sources of phosphate used as fertilizer for agriculture and phosphoric acid in the food industry. Phosphorites can also contain high concentrations of valuable, heavy, rare earth elements that may be economically recoverable and can contain up to 4% fluorine.
Marine Mining Context
The oceans cover nearly three quarters of the surface of the earth, and in the U.S., the area of seafloor comprising the Exclusive Economic Zone is greater than the land area on shore. This enormous ocean realm hosts many types of minerals that differ from those occurring terrestrially. Ferromanganese crusts, manganese nodules, phosphorites, and hydrothermal vent deposits, which occur from the Arctic to the Antarctic, are enriched in many metals including those currently deemed societally critical. It is therefore important to understand these minerals and the role they may play as future mineral resources.
People around the world demand metals and mineral resources for many uses, including technology, electronics, and green energy infrastructure such as wind turbines and electric cars. Critical minerals are defined as those that are essential to the economic and national security of a nation but that have a supply-chain vulnerable to disruption. In 2018, the Department of the Interior released a list of 54 critical minerals that was further refined to 35 based on Executive Order 13817, with the list to be reconsidered biannually. Across the USGS, research is underway to define and prioritize focus areas throughout the United States with resource potential for these 35 critical minerals. The Global Marine Mineral Resources project specifically informs the marine component.
To date, there is no mining of deep-sea minerals. In Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction, any marine mining is governed by the International Seabed Authority, which is currently drafting exploitation regulations. The Global Marine Mineral Resources project has provided scientific advice to the U.S. State Department and has served as a member of the U.S. delegation to the International Seabed Authority as an Observer Nation for the last 20 years. Japan completed equipment testing offshore of Okinawa in the fall of 2017, recovering 4 tons of metal sulfide. For comparison, it has been suggested that an economic seafloor massive sulfide (SMS) mine would recover on the order of 1 million tons of metal sulfide minerals. There is one permitted mine for copper, gold, and silver offshore Papua New Guinea, on 0.1 square kilometer of seafloor; and the Cook Islands are revising regulations for manganese nodules mining.
Below are other studies related to this project.
USGS Law of the Sea
Resources: EXPRESS
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Major and trace element geochemistry and mineralogy of ferromanganese crusts from seamounts within the Tuvalu Exclusive Economic Zone
Marine mineral geochemical data - Part One: Pacific Ocean USGS-affiliated historical data
Mineralogy, rare earth elements, and strontium isotopic composition of phosphorites and phosphatized rocks from the Rio Grande Rise, south Atlantic Ocean
Measurements of zinc, oxygen, and pH, from sphalerite and ZnS oxidation in seawater
Sorbed-water (H2O-) corrected chemistry for ferromanganese crust samples from the western equatorial Pacific Ocean
Below are multimedia items associated with this project.
Seafloor features such as sulfide mounds and chimneys are prominent evidence of hydrothermal activity. These features, whether active or dormant, are just the tip of the iceberg, so to speak; much of the “plumbing” of hydrothermal systems exists beneath the seafloor surface.
Seafloor features such as sulfide mounds and chimneys are prominent evidence of hydrothermal activity. These features, whether active or dormant, are just the tip of the iceberg, so to speak; much of the “plumbing” of hydrothermal systems exists beneath the seafloor surface.
Critical to scientific operations aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition is the submersible robots Sentry and Jason. Owned and operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI), these robots allow researchers to observe seafloor features and collect data from depths seldom visited by humans.
Critical to scientific operations aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition is the submersible robots Sentry and Jason. Owned and operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (WHOI), these robots allow researchers to observe seafloor features and collect data from depths seldom visited by humans.
For scientists aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition, obtaining sediment cores or deep-sea biological and geological samples after a Jason dive is only the beginning.
For scientists aboard the Escanaba Trough expedition, obtaining sediment cores or deep-sea biological and geological samples after a Jason dive is only the beginning.
Embarking on a three-week deep-sea research expedition requires a lot of preparation. For this expedition to Escanaba Trough, U.S. Geological Survey scientists and partners spend the first few days in port, building their laboratory space aboard the research vessel Thomas G. Thompson.
Embarking on a three-week deep-sea research expedition requires a lot of preparation. For this expedition to Escanaba Trough, U.S. Geological Survey scientists and partners spend the first few days in port, building their laboratory space aboard the research vessel Thomas G. Thompson.
Research Oceanographer Kira Mizell studies change in ocean chemistry by collecting marine minerals, looking for insights into past climate conditions and geologic history.
Research Oceanographer Kira Mizell studies change in ocean chemistry by collecting marine minerals, looking for insights into past climate conditions and geologic history.
During a recent dive on the New England Seamount chain off the North Atlantic coast, researchers aboard the NOAA Ocean Exploration Expedition, North Atlantic Stepping Stones, discovered a marine geological feature known as a ferromanganese (Fe-Mn) nodule field in the saddle between two peaks of Gosnold Seamount.
During a recent dive on the New England Seamount chain off the North Atlantic coast, researchers aboard the NOAA Ocean Exploration Expedition, North Atlantic Stepping Stones, discovered a marine geological feature known as a ferromanganese (Fe-Mn) nodule field in the saddle between two peaks of Gosnold Seamount.
Join USGS researchers Jason Chaytor and Kira Mizell as they virtually participate in a NOAA Ocean Exploration expedition to the depths of the North Atlantic.
Join USGS researchers Jason Chaytor and Kira Mizell as they virtually participate in a NOAA Ocean Exploration expedition to the depths of the North Atlantic.
Below are publications associated with this project.
Crystal chemistry of thallium in marine ferromanganese deposits
Deep-ocean polymetallic nodules and cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts in the global ocean: New sources for critical metals
Estimates of metals contained in abyssal manganese nodules and ferromanganese crusts in the global ocean based on regional variations and genetic types of nodules
Geochemical insights into formation of enigmatic ironstones from Rio Grande rise, South Atlantic Ocean
Miocene phosphatization of rocks from the summit of Rio Grande Rise, Southwest Atlantic Ocean
Extent of impact of deep-sea nodule mining midwater plumes is influenced by sediment loading, turbulence and thresholds
Carbonate-hosted microbial communities are prolific and pervasive methane oxidizers at geologically diverse marine methane seep sites
Changes in seabed mining
Ocean floor manganese deposits
Sphalerite oxidation in seawater with covellite: Implications for seafloor massive sulfide deposits and mine waste
The effects of phosphatization on the mineral associations and speciation of Pb in ferromanganese crusts
Research is needed to inform environmental management of hydrothermally inactive and extinct polymetallic sulfide (PMS) deposits
Below are news stories associated with this project.