Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G

Metadata record for data from ASAC Project 2212 See the link below for public details on this project. From the abstracts of two of the references: --- Ocean Drilling Program hole 504B revealed an ocean crust hydrothermal sulphur anomaly on the dyke-lava transition, with implications for global sulp...

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Other Authors: DAVIDSON, GARRY (hasPrincipalInvestigator), DAVIDSON, GARRY (processor), Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Australian Antarctic Data Centre
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchdata.ands.org.au/sulfur-isotope-patterns-cycling-g/699793
https://doi.org/10.4225/15/5747D1A4B4706
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2212
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699793
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic geoscientificInformation
oceans
ISOTOPES
EARTH SCIENCE
SOLID EARTH
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES
Sulfur isotope
Sulfur cycling
Oceanic crust
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
MACQUARIE ISLAND
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
spellingShingle geoscientificInformation
oceans
ISOTOPES
EARTH SCIENCE
SOLID EARTH
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES
Sulfur isotope
Sulfur cycling
Oceanic crust
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
MACQUARIE ISLAND
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G
topic_facet geoscientificInformation
oceans
ISOTOPES
EARTH SCIENCE
SOLID EARTH
GEOCHEMISTRY
GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES
Sulfur isotope
Sulfur cycling
Oceanic crust
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
MACQUARIE ISLAND
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
description Metadata record for data from ASAC Project 2212 See the link below for public details on this project. From the abstracts of two of the references: --- Ocean Drilling Program hole 504B revealed an ocean crust hydrothermal sulphur anomaly on the dyke-lava transition, with implications for global sulphur sinks. Here we confirm the presence of the anomaly sporadically along 7.5km of dyke-basalt contact on the Macquarie Ridge at Macquarie Island, a 39-9.7 Ma slow-spreading setting. Background contact-zone pyrite S contents average 1845 ppm across ~50 m. However zones of small-scale brittle faulting that commonly occur on and above the dyke-basalt contact average between 5000 and 11000 ppm S (20-30 m widths). These consist of steep ridge-parallel faults and fault splays on the contact, overlain by up to 50m of linked pyritic fault trellis. The contact zone faults are haloed by disseminated pyrite-chlorite, cross-cut by quartz-chlorite-sphalerite and epidote-cemented breccias, containing evidence of turbulent flow. The structural control on sulphur deposition is attributed to the active extensional slow spreading setting. With increasing extension, diffuse mixing across the contact was replaced by channelised flow and dynamic mixing in fault arrays. The magnitude of the dyke-lava transition sulphur sink must be reassessed to take account of this heterogeneity. --- There are only a handful of known hydrothermal sulfate occurrences from the mid-ocean ridge crust sub-surface, despite predictions that they should be common because of the imbalance between sulfur concentrations in venting MOR hotsprings, and that of recharging seawater. This deficit indicates that sub-surface sulfate deposition could be a globally important sulfur cycle sink. Therefore any new occurrences add considerably to the information base on sulfate in this environment. An important hydrothermal sulfate occurrence is preserved in ~10 Ma MOR crust on the east coast of Macquarie Island, formed during very slow oblique spreading prior to transition to a magmatic strike-slip plate boundary. The sulfate occurs mainly as white gypsum veins and breccia cement associated with a major fault zone 400m south of Nuggets Point. The site is in the amphibolite facies sheeted dyke and gabbro screen hanging wall of a major northwest-trending graben, itself filled with sub-ziolite facies basaltic breccias and lava flows. The sulfate veins occur as several 2-5m wide vein complexes, with surrounding vein networks over several hundred metres. Veins are strongly associated with oblique-sinistral jogs on a N to NNE-trending fault zone, here termed the Nuggets fault. This fault is intruded by thin, weakly metamorphosed, vesicular sheeted dykes (forming a greater than 30m wide zone) interpreted to have developed contemporaneously with the nearby graben, Gypsum is mainly in the amphibolite facies rocks and the younger dykes, but also occurs as thin gape-fill in dykes of the younger volcanic graben. These field relations indicte that the sulfate veins were emplaced contemporaneously with graben formation and infill, approximately 200m below the sea floor. The host fault zone is contiguous with mapped graben offsets, and is interpreted as an oblique transfer fault. Secondary epidote and quartz-chalcopyrite veining, together with subsequent chlorite-pyrite alteration, predate sulfate, and suggest early hydrothermal upflow conditions. These are cut by vein complexes which display anhydrite relics within foliated gypsum plus or minus pyrite veins surrounded by marginal vein networks of zeolite-gypsum-calcite. These assemblages require central temperatures of greater than 150 degrees C, with a rapid gradation in outer veins to cooler conditions, perhaps less than 100 degrees C. These features imply general cooler recharge conditions; our previous work has shown that this involved a complex history of sub-surface microbial interaction. These field and mineralogical relations provide one predictive tectonic context for the deposition and style of hydrothermal sulfate in extending MOR crust. Sulfate fluid is strongly fault channeled, and rather than occurring in graben boundary faults, deposits precipitates preferentially in transfer faults under-going limited magmatic activity on the graben edge. A description of the fields in this dataset: m from start: metres measured over the ground between sample points. Easting mE, and Northing mE: estimated position relative to the AMG grid used in the 1;10000 mapping series, Mineral Resources Tasmania, using a horizontal datum of WGS 1984. Map date of production, August 1997.
author2 DAVIDSON, GARRY (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
DAVIDSON, GARRY (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G
title_short Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G
title_full Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G
title_fullStr Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G
title_full_unstemmed Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G
title_sort sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on macquarie island-implications for global sulfur cycling g
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/sulfur-isotope-patterns-cycling-g/699793
https://doi.org/10.4225/15/5747D1A4B4706
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2212
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-54.0; southlimit=-54.0; westlimit=158.0; eastLimit=159.0; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 1997-09-01 to 1998-03-31
long_lat ENVELOPE(158.0,159.0,-54.0,-54.0)
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/sulfur-isotope-patterns-cycling-g/699793
3a3557f0-dc31-42da-9d4b-c63cc88211c0
doi:10.4225/15/5747D1A4B4706
ASAC_2212
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2212
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4225/15/5747D1A4B4706
_version_ 1766066330380795904
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699793 2023-05-15T17:09:57+02:00 Sulfur isotope patterns of oceanic crust on Macquarie Island-implications for global sulfur cycling G DAVIDSON, GARRY (hasPrincipalInvestigator) DAVIDSON, GARRY (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-54.0; southlimit=-54.0; westlimit=158.0; eastLimit=159.0; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 1997-09-01 to 1998-03-31 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/sulfur-isotope-patterns-cycling-g/699793 https://doi.org/10.4225/15/5747D1A4B4706 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2212 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.ands.org.au/sulfur-isotope-patterns-cycling-g/699793 3a3557f0-dc31-42da-9d4b-c63cc88211c0 doi:10.4225/15/5747D1A4B4706 ASAC_2212 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2212 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre geoscientificInformation oceans ISOTOPES EARTH SCIENCE SOLID EARTH GEOCHEMISTRY GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES Sulfur isotope Sulfur cycling Oceanic crust OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt MACQUARIE ISLAND GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR dataset ftands https://doi.org/10.4225/15/5747D1A4B4706 2020-01-05T21:16:44Z Metadata record for data from ASAC Project 2212 See the link below for public details on this project. From the abstracts of two of the references: --- Ocean Drilling Program hole 504B revealed an ocean crust hydrothermal sulphur anomaly on the dyke-lava transition, with implications for global sulphur sinks. Here we confirm the presence of the anomaly sporadically along 7.5km of dyke-basalt contact on the Macquarie Ridge at Macquarie Island, a 39-9.7 Ma slow-spreading setting. Background contact-zone pyrite S contents average 1845 ppm across ~50 m. However zones of small-scale brittle faulting that commonly occur on and above the dyke-basalt contact average between 5000 and 11000 ppm S (20-30 m widths). These consist of steep ridge-parallel faults and fault splays on the contact, overlain by up to 50m of linked pyritic fault trellis. The contact zone faults are haloed by disseminated pyrite-chlorite, cross-cut by quartz-chlorite-sphalerite and epidote-cemented breccias, containing evidence of turbulent flow. The structural control on sulphur deposition is attributed to the active extensional slow spreading setting. With increasing extension, diffuse mixing across the contact was replaced by channelised flow and dynamic mixing in fault arrays. The magnitude of the dyke-lava transition sulphur sink must be reassessed to take account of this heterogeneity. --- There are only a handful of known hydrothermal sulfate occurrences from the mid-ocean ridge crust sub-surface, despite predictions that they should be common because of the imbalance between sulfur concentrations in venting MOR hotsprings, and that of recharging seawater. This deficit indicates that sub-surface sulfate deposition could be a globally important sulfur cycle sink. Therefore any new occurrences add considerably to the information base on sulfate in this environment. An important hydrothermal sulfate occurrence is preserved in ~10 Ma MOR crust on the east coast of Macquarie Island, formed during very slow oblique spreading prior to transition to a magmatic strike-slip plate boundary. The sulfate occurs mainly as white gypsum veins and breccia cement associated with a major fault zone 400m south of Nuggets Point. The site is in the amphibolite facies sheeted dyke and gabbro screen hanging wall of a major northwest-trending graben, itself filled with sub-ziolite facies basaltic breccias and lava flows. The sulfate veins occur as several 2-5m wide vein complexes, with surrounding vein networks over several hundred metres. Veins are strongly associated with oblique-sinistral jogs on a N to NNE-trending fault zone, here termed the Nuggets fault. This fault is intruded by thin, weakly metamorphosed, vesicular sheeted dykes (forming a greater than 30m wide zone) interpreted to have developed contemporaneously with the nearby graben, Gypsum is mainly in the amphibolite facies rocks and the younger dykes, but also occurs as thin gape-fill in dykes of the younger volcanic graben. These field relations indicte that the sulfate veins were emplaced contemporaneously with graben formation and infill, approximately 200m below the sea floor. The host fault zone is contiguous with mapped graben offsets, and is interpreted as an oblique transfer fault. Secondary epidote and quartz-chalcopyrite veining, together with subsequent chlorite-pyrite alteration, predate sulfate, and suggest early hydrothermal upflow conditions. These are cut by vein complexes which display anhydrite relics within foliated gypsum plus or minus pyrite veins surrounded by marginal vein networks of zeolite-gypsum-calcite. These assemblages require central temperatures of greater than 150 degrees C, with a rapid gradation in outer veins to cooler conditions, perhaps less than 100 degrees C. These features imply general cooler recharge conditions; our previous work has shown that this involved a complex history of sub-surface microbial interaction. These field and mineralogical relations provide one predictive tectonic context for the deposition and style of hydrothermal sulfate in extending MOR crust. Sulfate fluid is strongly fault channeled, and rather than occurring in graben boundary faults, deposits precipitates preferentially in transfer faults under-going limited magmatic activity on the graben edge. A description of the fields in this dataset: m from start: metres measured over the ground between sample points. Easting mE, and Northing mE: estimated position relative to the AMG grid used in the 1;10000 mapping series, Mineral Resources Tasmania, using a horizontal datum of WGS 1984. Map date of production, August 1997. Dataset Macquarie Island Southern Ocean Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Southern Ocean ENVELOPE(158.0,159.0,-54.0,-54.0)