Sulfate reduction was studied by radiotracer methods in geothermally heated mud retrieved from an area near black smokers in the southern trough of the Guaymas Basin at 2000 m water depth. Sediment cores were taken by the submersible Alvin from three closely spaced sites. Steep hydrothermal gradients from 2.7°C at the surface up to 126°C at 75 cm depth were measured in the sediments. Extensive conversion of sulfate to H2S, with 4 mM SO42- and 15 mM H2S at 5 cm depth, indicated thermogenic reduction at depth in the upwards percolating hot pore fluid. Pyrite concentrations were high, 200 μmol S cm-3, while FeS was low near detection limit. Bacterial sulfate reduction showed maximum rates of 30-140 nmol SO42- cm-3 d-1. While mesophilic sulfate reduction occurred near the cold (2-3°C) sediment surface, extremely thermophilic activity was observed in deeper, hot layers, the actual depth dependent on the temperature profile of the particular core. In the subsurface sediment at 10-45 cm depth, optimum temperatures for sulfate reduction increased from 63 to 83°C, with corresponding maximum temperatures of 66-90°C. © 1990.