981 resultados para Subsurface carbon and hydrogen


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The basaltic rocks of Hole 794D drilled during Leg 128 are strongly altered. Microprobe analyses and XRD spectra on small quantities of matter extracted from thin sections show that primary minerals and glassy zones of the groundmass are totally or partially replaced by clay minerals with chlorite/saponite mixed-layer composition whatever the rock sample considered. This mixed-layer was also identified in veins and vesicles where it crystallizes in spheroidal aggregates. The largest veins and vesicles are filled by a zoned deposit: the chlorite/saponite mixed-layer always occupies the central part and is rimmed by pure saponite. Calcite crystallizes in secondary fractures which crosscut the clayey veins and vesicles. Chemographic analysis based on the M+-4Si-3R2+ projection shows that the chemical composition of the saponite component in the mixed-layer is identical to that of the free saponite. This indicates that the clay mineral crystallization was controlled by the chemical composition of the alteration fluids. From petrographic evidence, it is suggested that both chlorite/saponite mixed-layer and free saponite belong to the same hydrothermal event and are produced by a temperature decrease. This is supported by the stable isotopic data. The isotopic data show very little variation: d18O saponite ranges from 13.1 per mil to 13.5 per mil, and dD saponite from -73.6 per mil to -70.0 per mil. d18O calcite varies from +19.7 per mil to +21.9 per mil vs SMOW and d13C from -3.2 per mil to +0.4 per mil vs. PDB. These values are consistent with seawater alteration of the basalt. The formation of saponite took place at 150°-180°C and the formation of calcite at about 65°C.

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Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen isotope ratios determined on 32 squeezed interstitial fluid samples show remarkable variations with depth. For the most part these variations are related to diagenetic and alteration reactions taking place in the sediments, and in the underlying basalts. delta13C SumCO2 depth distributions at Sites 642 and 643 are the result of mixing of original SumCO2 of the paleo bottom water with SumCO2 released by remineralization of organic matter. At Site 644, where sulfate exhaustion occurs, the processes of methanogenesis by CO2 reduction and anaerobic methanotrophy strongly influence the delta13C SumCO2 distribution. Hydrogen and oxygen isotopes roughly covary, and become enriched in 16O and1H with depth. This effect is most pronounced at Sites 642 and 643, possibly due to the influence of the directly underlying basalts. Isotope depletions at Site 644 are much lower, corresponding to the greater sediment depth to basement. The alternative, that the O, H isotope shifts are due primarily to autochthonous diagenetic and exchange reactions, is not supported by the data available.