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InterRidge is a non-profit organization that promotes international cooperation in research of oceanic spreading centers, including mid-ocean ridge and back-arc basin systems. It was launched in 1992, and in 2009 InterRidge has 6 principal, 4 associate, and 21 corresponding member nations and regions. InterRidge has more than 2500 individual member scientists in disciplines ranging from marine geology to chemistry, biology, and ocean engineering.

The InterRidge Office rotates every 3 years. For 2007-2009 InterRidge is hosted by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the USA. InterRidge is governed by a steering committee consisting of delegates from the principal and associate member nations and regions.

Mission
As stated on the InterRidge website, "InterRidge promotes interdisciplinary, international studies of oceanic spreading centers by creating a global research community, planning and coordinating new science programs that no single nation can achieve alone, exchanging scientific information, and sharing new technologies and facilities. InterRidge is dedicated to reaching out to the public, scientists and governments, and to providing a unified voice for ocean ridge researchers worldwide."

Four Main Functions
InterRidge has four main functions, which may be summarized as: 1) Building a community of ridge scientists, 2) Identifying important scientific questions through working groups and workshops, 3) Acting as a voice for ridge scientists, and 4) Education and outreach. A link to the four main functions is listed below in External links. InterRidge serves as a "clearinghouse" for information on mid-ocean ridge research across the globe. InterRidge publishes an annual newsletter with preliminary results from field work, national and regional reports, and working group updates. InterRidge maintains 3 databases: a member database, a research cruise database (past and upcoming cruises to the ridge crest), and a database of active hydrothermal vent fields.

First Decade
InterRidge began at a meeting in France in 1990 that gathered ridge scientists from 10 nations and regions with reports submitted by Canada, France, Iceland, Japan, Portugal, USSR, UK, and USA. The rationale for this meeting developed from a recommendation at a previous U.S. RIDGE initiative workshop that an international initiative be pursued. Following the first InterRidge meeting, an "Interim Steering Group" was formed and the first program plan was produced in 1992.

As stated on the InterRidge website, the first decade (1992-2003) of the organization "produced a coordinated, international ridge community of member countries that had previously been working alone, and left a string of success stories in its wake. Two examples are the first-ever mapping and sampling of one of the slowest spreading and remote centers known to date, the Gakkel Ridge in the Arctic Ocean, and the exploration and study of the Southwest Indian Ridge."

Second Decade
Two functions of InterRidge were developed more fully in the second decade (2004-2013) of the organization: 1) the scientific working groups, and 2) education and outreach. Scientific working groups are a key metric for success of whether InterRidge is delivering on its mission. These working groups are proposed by an international group of scientists, usually following a call for proposals issued by the InterRidge Office (e.g., InterRidge Email #9 (May 21st, 2007) "Call for proposals from the international community for new InterRidge Working Groups"). Working groups in 2009 are Deep Earth Sampling, Hydrothermal Energy and Ocean Carbon Cycles, Long-Range Exploration, Mantle Imaging, Monitoring and Observatories, Seafloor Mineralization, and Vent Ecology. In 2008 InterRidge began offering fellowships for student research projects, and in 2009 InterRidge partnered with the International Seabed Authority Endowment Fund to expand the program into the InterRidge Student and Postdoctoral Fellowship Program.

”Code of Conduct”
Starting in 2000 with a workshop on "Management and Conservation of Hydrothermal Vent Ecosystems," the InterRidge Biology Working Groups developed a set of six guidelines which was published in 2006 as the “InterRidge Statement of Commitment to Responsible Research Practices at Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vents.” The link to the full statement and six guidelines is listed below in External links.

Interactions with other international scientific organizations
InterRidge is an affiliated program to SCOR (Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research), has a liaison to IODP (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program), and is in close communication with other organizations such as ChEss (Chemosynthetic Ecosystem science), a field project of the Census of Marine Life program (CoML).