Very low-grade secondary minerals as indicators of palaeo-hydrothermal systems in the Upper Cretaceous volcanic succession of Hannah Point, Livingston Island, Antarctica

The Upper Cretaceous basic volcanic succession in Hannah Point, Livingston Island, Antarctica, presents a widespread occurrence of very low-grade secondary minerals. They occur filling amygdules, veins and veinlets, and replacing phenocrysts and groundmass/matrix. The paragenetic associations includ...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied Clay Science
Main Authors: Bastias Silva, Miguel Joaquin, Fuentes, Francisco, Aguirre, Luis, Hervé, Francisco, Demant, Alain, Deckart, Katja, Torres, Teresa
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:109546
Description
Summary:The Upper Cretaceous basic volcanic succession in Hannah Point, Livingston Island, Antarctica, presents a widespread occurrence of very low-grade secondary minerals. They occur filling amygdules, veins and veinlets, and replacing phenocrysts and groundmass/matrix. The paragenetic associations include minerals such as laumontite, heulandite, stilbite and clinoptilolite; mafic phyllosilicates corresponding to chlorite and smectite mixed layers (compositions ranging from 57% to 84% of chlorite), albite, calcite and minor celadonite. The mineral assemblages indicate, based on laboratory and field studies, these mineral paragenesis temperatures of 150–200 °C and pressures of 600–1.800 bars, which agrees with the calculated equilibrium temperatures of 160–190 °C, using chlorite geothermometry. These burial pressures, which were estimated from paragenesis, cannot be attained considering the present thickness of 500 m of the sequence, because at least 1 km of erosion is required to produce the mineral associations. Based on textural evidence, three successive stages are proposed to explain the genesis of the secondary minerals: (1) mafic phyllosilicates ± celadonite, (2) zeolites and (3) calcite. The characteristics of these stages point to a regional burial metamorphism (stage 1) superimposed by hydrothermal alteration (stages 2 and 3). The mineral paragenetical evolution can be used as a proxy for the prospection of modern geothermal reservoirs by allowing the identification of hydrothermal alteration processes and burial metamorphism.