Giant pumice raft from underwater volcanic eruption makes its way to Great Barrier Reef 

Posted: August 26, 2019 by oldbrew in News, Ocean dynamics, volcanos

Coral reef [image credit: Toby Hudson / Wikipedia]


An example of how a volcano can help replenish coral reefs. Great Barrier Reef doomsters take note: ‘Associate Professor Bryan said this sort of event was occurring every five years.’

Drifting through the ocean, the sailors suddenly lost sight of water as The New Daily reports.

Surrounding their boat was a floating mass of pumice rocks — the result of an an underwater volcanic eruption near Tonga two weeks ago.

Queensland University of Technology geologist Associate Professor Scott Bryan said it “would have been a really eerie experience sailing into this sea of floating rock”.

“No longer seeing water and hearing the scratching of the pumice against the hull,” he said.

Known as a pumice raft, this so-called island of floating rock is gradually heading for Australian shores and is so expansive it can be tracked via satellite.

Credit: youtube


Australian couple Michael Hoult and Larissa Brill detailed their experience in a Facebook post with the “total rock rubble slick” while sailing their catamaran to Fiji.

“The waves were knocked back to almost calm and the boat was slowed to 1kt [knot],” they wrote.

“The rubble slick went as far as we could see in the moonlight and without spotlight – we made a turn to starboard and managed to sail clear of the rubble slick.”

Marine life ‘hitching a ride’

Associate Professor Bryan said along the way an abundance of marine life would attach themselves to the pumice raft, “hitching a ride” across the Coral Sea.

“In this 150-odd square kilometres of pumice out there right now, there’s probably billions to trillions of pieces of pumice all floating together and each piece of pumice is a vehicle for some marine organism,” he said.

He said pieces of pumice should start washing up along Australia’s coastline in seven to 12 months.

“When it gets here, [the pumice raft will be] covered in a whole range of organisms of algae and barnacles and corals and crabs and snails and worms,” he said.

“We’re going to have millions of individual corals and lots of other organisms all coming in together with the potential of finding new homes along our coastline.

“This is a way for healthy, young corals to be rapidly introduced to the Great Barrier Reef.”

Associate Professor Bryan has studied the phenomenon for two decades, and 15 years ago he published research about an earlier eruption involving the same volcano near Tonga.

“I saw pumice along the beach and thought it must have come from some eruption, which led me to forensically work out where,” he said.

Full report here [includes YouTube video].

Comments
  1. hunterson7 says:

    So cool. Thank you.

  2. pameladragon says:

    What, no alarmists screaming that this will be the death knell for the GBR?

  3. oldbrew says:

    so expansive it can be tracked via satellite

    Like the Barrier Reef itself. Maybe there is some connection between the sizes?

  4. Plain Jane says:

    And if it was a raft of plastic thongs, and plastic bags, and old fishing nets, and polystyrene boxes it would also carry millions of marine organisms and supply them with something to live on and it would cart them about the ocean in the same way and increase marine productivity – but it would be a disaster, because it would be man made, and therefore tainted with original sin. But it would also have the same beneficial effects. But those beneficial effects could never be mentioned of course.

  5. oldbrew says:

    Scientists reproduce coral in lab, offering hope for reefs
    August 27, 2019

    https://m.phys.org/news/2019-08-scientists-coral-lab-reefs.html