The existence and approximate location of the Gakkel Ridge were predicted by
Soviet polar explorer
Yakov Yakovlevich Gakkel and confirmed on Soviet expeditions in the Arctic around 1950. The Ridge is named after him, and the name was recognized in April 1987 by
SCUFN (under that body's old name, the Sub-Committee on Geographical Names and Nomenclature of Ocean Bottom Features). In 2001 two research icebreakers, the German
Polarstern and the American
Healy, with several groups of scientists, cruised to the Gakkel Ridge to explore it and collect petrological samples. Among other discoveries, this expedition found evidence of
hydrothermal vents. In 2007,
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution conducted the "Arctic Gakkel Vents Expedition" (AGAVE), which made some unanticipated discoveries, including the unconsolidated fragmented
pyroclastic volcanic deposits that cover the axial valley of the ridge (whose area is greater than 10 km2). These suggest volatile substances in concentrations ten times those in the magmas of normal mid-ocean ridges. Using "free-swimming"
robotic submersibles on the Gakkel ridge, the AGAVE expedition also discovered what they called "bizarre 'mats' of microbial communities containing a half dozen or more new species". A hydrothermal site, named "Aurora", was discovered in 2014. Aurora has elevated levels of
methane and high temperatures, suggesting interactions between water and
ultramafic rock below the vent field (rather than
basalt reactions). Aurora's geochemistry may resemble that of the
Rainbow Vent Field in the Atlantic Ocean. ==Geology==