Strontium chemistry of anhydrite from DSDP/ODP Hole 504B


Autoria(s): Teagle, Damon AH; Alt, Jeffrey C; Halliday, Alex N
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 0.961108 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: -65.588718 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 0.000000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -83.730300 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 1.227200 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 0.000000 * DATE/TIME START: 1986-10-05T11:45:00 * DATE/TIME END: 1991-11-12T04:10:00

Data(s)

26/01/1998

Resumo

A unique record of the chemical evolution of seawater during hydrothermal recharge into oceanic crust is preserved by anhydrite from the volcanic sequences and sheeted dike complex in ODP Hole 504B. Chemical and isotopic analyses 87Sr/86Sr, delta18O, delta34S of anhydrite constrain the changing composition of fluids due to reaction with basalt. There is a general trend of decreasing 87Sr/86Sr of anhydrite, corresponding to the minor incorporation of basaltic strontium with depth in the volcanic rocks. 87Sr/86Sr ratios decrease rapidly with depth in the dikes to values identical to host basalt (0.7029). Sr/Ca ratios (<0.1 mmol/mol) suggest that recharge fluids have very low Sr concentrations and fluids evolve by first precipitating Sr-bearing phases before extensive exchange of Sr with the host basalt. There is a background trend of decreasing sulfate delta18O with depth from +12-13? in the lower volcanics to +7? in the lower sheeted dikes recording an increase in recharge fluid temperature from c. 150° to c. 250°C, and confirming the presence of sulfate in hydrothermal fluids at elevated temperatures. From the amount of anhydrite recovered from Hole 504B and the amount of seawater sulfur that has been reduced to sulfide, a minimum seawater recharge flux can be calculated. This value is 4-25 times lower than estimates of high-temperature fluid fluxes based on either thermal constraints or global chemical budgets and suggests that there is significant deficit of seawater-derived sulfur in the oceanic crust. Only a minor proportion of the seawater that percolates into the crust near the axis is heated to high temperatures and exits as black smoker-type fluids. A significant proportion of the axial heat loss must be advected at 200-250°C by sulfate-bearing hydrothermal solutions that egress diffusely from the crust. These fluids penetrate into the dikes and exchange both heat and chemical tracers without the extensive clogging of porosity by anhydrite precipitation, which would halt hydrothermal circulation for any reasonable fluid flux. The heating of the major proportion of hydrothermal fluids to only moderate temperatures (c. 250°C) reconciles estimates of hydrothermal fluxes derived from thermal models and global geochemical budgets. The flux of hydrothermal sulfate would be of a magnitude similar to the riverine input, and oxygen-isotopic exchange at 200-250°C between dissolved sulfate and recharge fluids during hydrothermal circulation provides a mechanism to continuously buffer seawater sulfate oxygen to the light isotopic composition observed.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.711803

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.711803

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Teagle, Damon AH; Alt, Jeffrey C; Halliday, Alex N (1998): Tracing the chemical evolution of fluids during hydrothermal recharge: Constraints from anhydrite recovered in ODP Hole 504B. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 155(3-4), 167-182, doi:10.1016/S0012-821X(97)00209-4

Palavras-Chave #-; [SO4]2-; 111-504B; 137-504B; 140-504B; 70-504B; 83-504B; 87Sr/86Sr; 87Sr/86Sr e; Altn. % is the modal proportion of secondary mineral; Calculated; d18O; d34S; Deep Sea Drilling Project; delta 18O; delta 34S; Depth; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Event; Glomar Challenger; Isotope ratio mass spectrometry; Joides Resolution; Label; Label 2; Leg111; Leg137; Leg140; Leg69; Leg83; Lithologic unit/sequence; Min altered; Minerals, altered; mmol/mol; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; ODP sample designation; of formation calculated from the fractionation equation (Chiba et al., 1985, doi:10.1016/0012-821X(81)90025-X) for 0 seawater; piece no; Rb; Rubidium; Samp com; Sample code/label; Sample code/label 2; Sample comment; SMOW; SO4-S; Sr; Sr/Ca; Strontium; Strontium/Calcium ratio; Strontium 87/Strontium 86, error; Strontium 87/Strontium 86 ratio; Sulfate; T cal; Temperature, calculated; Thermal Ionization Mass Spectrometry (TIMS); type; Unit; X-MORB is the proportion of MORB-derived Sr in anhydrite compared to 6-Ma-old and modern seawater for (87Sr/86Sr)MORB = 0.7025, (87Sr/86Sr)6 Ma-SW = 0.70896 and (87Sr/86Sr)modern-SW = 0.70918
Tipo

Dataset