Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift

Typical Mid-Oceanic ridge hydrothermal systems are in general significantly enriched in Ca due to leaching from the magmatic basement (albitization of anorthite), while Mg and SO4 are quantitatively removed because of Mgrich smectite and anhydrite formation and further processes. In the Terceira Rif...

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Main Authors: Schmidt, Christopher, Hensen, Christian, Wallmann, Klaus, Liebetrau, Volker, Tatzel, Michael, Schurr, Simon L., Geilert, Sonja, Hübscher, Christian, Kutterolf, Steffen, Lebas, Elodie, Haffert, Laura, Strauss, Harald, Hansteen, Thor H.
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/48515/
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spelling ftoceanrep:oai:oceanrep.geomar.de:48515 2023-05-15T17:35:44+02:00 Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift Schmidt, Christopher Hensen, Christian Wallmann, Klaus Liebetrau, Volker Tatzel, Michael Schurr, Simon L. Geilert, Sonja Hübscher, Christian Kutterolf, Steffen Lebas, Elodie Haffert, Laura Strauss, Harald Hansteen, Thor H. 2019 https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/48515/ unknown Schmidt, C. , Hensen, C. , Wallmann, K. , Liebetrau, V., Tatzel, M., Schurr, S. L., Geilert, S. , Hübscher, C., Kutterolf, S. , Lebas, E. , Haffert, L., Strauss, H. and Hansteen, T. H. (2019) Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift. [Talk] In: EGU General Assembly 2019. , 07.-12.04.2019, Vienna, Austria . info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftoceanrep 2023-04-07T15:48:36Z Typical Mid-Oceanic ridge hydrothermal systems are in general significantly enriched in Ca due to leaching from the magmatic basement (albitization of anorthite), while Mg and SO4 are quantitatively removed because of Mgrich smectite and anhydrite formation and further processes. In the Terceira Rift (TR), a hyper-slow spreading center in the Central North Atlantic Ocean, hydrothermal fluid venting is known to occur only at shallow intertidal water depths around the volcanogenic Azores Archipelago. Here, we show for the first time that hydrothermal fluid venting is active in the eastern TR at water depths of 2800 m. Pore fluids of a sediment core taken close to a volcanic cone, however, show that the fluid composition is significantly different from typical Mid-Oceanic hydrothermal systems. Pore water Mg, SO4, and total alkalinity (TA) concentrations are significantly higher compared to seawater and a nearby reference core. The most straightforward way of interpreting these excursions is the re-dissolution of the metastable mineral caminite (MgSO4 0.4Mg(OH)2 0.2H2O). Caminite is known from mineral assemblages with e.g. anhydrite and forms only under specific conditions such as high fluid temperatures and in altered oceanic crust with only few fresh basaltic glass present, which are generally met at the TR. Isotope measurements of �34S, �26Mg, 87Sr/86Sr, �88=86Sr, �44=42Ca and �30Si provide additional evidence for caminite as a source for Mg, SO4 and TA. The redissolution of the caminite is interpreted as a sign of cooling temperatures, which may indicate a waning state of the hydrothermal system. To date, no signs of extensive caminite formation and/or dissolution have been reported. Our study implies that element recycling through caminite might play a presently unrecognized role in element budgets of hydrothermal systems. Conference Object North Atlantic OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel)
institution Open Polar
collection OceanRep (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre für Ocean Research Kiel)
op_collection_id ftoceanrep
language unknown
description Typical Mid-Oceanic ridge hydrothermal systems are in general significantly enriched in Ca due to leaching from the magmatic basement (albitization of anorthite), while Mg and SO4 are quantitatively removed because of Mgrich smectite and anhydrite formation and further processes. In the Terceira Rift (TR), a hyper-slow spreading center in the Central North Atlantic Ocean, hydrothermal fluid venting is known to occur only at shallow intertidal water depths around the volcanogenic Azores Archipelago. Here, we show for the first time that hydrothermal fluid venting is active in the eastern TR at water depths of 2800 m. Pore fluids of a sediment core taken close to a volcanic cone, however, show that the fluid composition is significantly different from typical Mid-Oceanic hydrothermal systems. Pore water Mg, SO4, and total alkalinity (TA) concentrations are significantly higher compared to seawater and a nearby reference core. The most straightforward way of interpreting these excursions is the re-dissolution of the metastable mineral caminite (MgSO4 0.4Mg(OH)2 0.2H2O). Caminite is known from mineral assemblages with e.g. anhydrite and forms only under specific conditions such as high fluid temperatures and in altered oceanic crust with only few fresh basaltic glass present, which are generally met at the TR. Isotope measurements of �34S, �26Mg, 87Sr/86Sr, �88=86Sr, �44=42Ca and �30Si provide additional evidence for caminite as a source for Mg, SO4 and TA. The redissolution of the caminite is interpreted as a sign of cooling temperatures, which may indicate a waning state of the hydrothermal system. To date, no signs of extensive caminite formation and/or dissolution have been reported. Our study implies that element recycling through caminite might play a presently unrecognized role in element budgets of hydrothermal systems.
format Conference Object
author Schmidt, Christopher
Hensen, Christian
Wallmann, Klaus
Liebetrau, Volker
Tatzel, Michael
Schurr, Simon L.
Geilert, Sonja
Hübscher, Christian
Kutterolf, Steffen
Lebas, Elodie
Haffert, Laura
Strauss, Harald
Hansteen, Thor H.
spellingShingle Schmidt, Christopher
Hensen, Christian
Wallmann, Klaus
Liebetrau, Volker
Tatzel, Michael
Schurr, Simon L.
Geilert, Sonja
Hübscher, Christian
Kutterolf, Steffen
Lebas, Elodie
Haffert, Laura
Strauss, Harald
Hansteen, Thor H.
Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift
author_facet Schmidt, Christopher
Hensen, Christian
Wallmann, Klaus
Liebetrau, Volker
Tatzel, Michael
Schurr, Simon L.
Geilert, Sonja
Hübscher, Christian
Kutterolf, Steffen
Lebas, Elodie
Haffert, Laura
Strauss, Harald
Hansteen, Thor H.
author_sort Schmidt, Christopher
title Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift
title_short Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift
title_full Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift
title_fullStr Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift
title_full_unstemmed Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift
title_sort genesis of high mg and so4 hydrothermal fluids in the terceira rift
publishDate 2019
url https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/48515/
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Schmidt, C. , Hensen, C. , Wallmann, K. , Liebetrau, V., Tatzel, M., Schurr, S. L., Geilert, S. , Hübscher, C., Kutterolf, S. , Lebas, E. , Haffert, L., Strauss, H. and Hansteen, T. H. (2019) Genesis of high Mg and SO4 hydrothermal fluids in the Terceira Rift. [Talk] In: EGU General Assembly 2019. , 07.-12.04.2019, Vienna, Austria .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
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