A pumice raft is a floating raft of pumice created by some eruptions of submarine volcanoes or coastal subaerial volcanoes.
Pumice rafts have unique characteristics, such as the highest surface-area-to-volume ratio known for any rock type, long term flotation and beaching in the tidal zone, exposure to a variety of conditions, including dehydration, and an ability to absorb many potentially advantageous elements/compounds. For at least these reasons, have proposed pumice rafts as a possible ideal substrate for the Abiogenesis.Martin D. Brasier, Richard Matthewman, Sean McMahon and David Wacey. "Pumice as a Remarkable Substrate for the Origin of Life" Astrobiology. August 31, 2011
Biologists have suggested that animals and plants have Animal migration from island to island on pumice rafts. New Island and Pumice Raft, Tonga, NASA Earth Observatory photo with commentary, August 2006
Volcanic activity in the South Pacific near Tonga on August 12, 2006 caused the emergence of a new island. The crew of the Maiken, a yacht that had left the northern Tongan islands group of Vava'u in August, reported that they had seen streaks of light, porous pumice stone floating in the water—and then had "sailed into a vast, many-miles-wide belt of densely packed pumice". They went on to witness the ephemeral island known as Home Reef breaching the surface. New Island and Pumice Raft, Tonga, NASA Earth Observatory photo with commentary, November 2006
A very large pumice raft appeared near New Zealand in August 2012. It was reported to be spread on an area long and about wide, with pumice blocks poking up to above the ocean surface.Space.com, "Source of Mysterious Pumice 'Raft' in Pacific Found, NASA Says", Jeanna Bryner, 14 August 2012 On 10 August 2012 the raft with an estimated area of was observed near Raoul Island, north-east of New Zealand by the Royal New Zealand Navy. A possible source for the pumice was the July 2012 eruption of Havre seamount in the Kermadec Islands north of New Zealand.
In August 2019, a large floating pumice raft covering was discovered in the tropical Pacific Ocean near Late Island in the Kingdom of Tonga. Sailors described a "rubble slick made up of rocks from marble to basketball size such that water was not visible", as well as a smell of sulfur.
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