Metalliferous Sediments along Ocean Ridges

1973 ◽  
Vol 244 (134) ◽  
pp. 49-49
Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Olatunde Popoola ◽  
Xiqiu Han ◽  
Yejian Wang ◽  
Zhongyan Qiu ◽  
Ying Ye ◽  
...  

In this paper, we conduct a comparative study on the mineralogy and geochemistry of metalliferous sediment collected near the active hydrothermal site (Wocan-1) and inactive hydrothermal site (Wocan-2) from Wocan Hydrothermal Field, on the Carlsberg Ridge (CR), northwest Indian Ocean. We aim to understand the spatial variations in the primary and post-depositional conditions and the intensity of hydrothermal circulations in the Wocan hydrothermal systems. Sediment samples were collected from six stations which includes TVG-07, TVG-08 (Wocan-1), TVG-05, TVG-10 (Wocan-2), TVG-12 and TVG-13 (ridge flanks). The mineralogical investigations show that sediment samples from Wocan-1 and Wocan-2 are composed of chalcopyrite, pyrite, sphalerite, barite, gypsum, amorphous silica, altered volcanic glass, Fe-oxides, and hydroxides. The ridge flank sediments are dominated by biogenic calcite and foraminifera assemblages. The bulk sediment samples of Wocan-1 have an elevated Fe/Mn ratio (up to ~1545), with lower U contents (<7.4 ppm) and U/Fe ratio (<~1.8 × 10−5). The sulfide separates (chalcopyrite, pyrite, and sphalerite) are enriched in Se, Co, As, Sb, and Pb. The calculated sphalerite precipitation temperature (Sph.PT) yields ~278 °C. The sulfur isotope (δ34S) analysis returned a light value of 3.0–3.6‰. The bulk sediment samples of Wocan-2 have a lower Fe/Mn ratio (<~523), with high U contents (up to 19.6 ppm) and U/Fe ratio (up to ~6.2 × 10−5). The sulfide separates are enriched in Zn, Cu, Tl, and Sn. The calculated Sph.PT is ~233 °C. The δ34S returned significant values of 4.1–4.3‰ and 6.4–8.7‰ in stations TVG-10 and TVG-05, respectively. The geochemical signatures (e.g., Fe/Mn and U/Fe ratio, mineral chemistry of sulfides separates, and S-isotopes and Sph.PT) suggest that sediment samples from Wocan-1 are located near intermediate–high temperature hydrothermal discharge environments. Additionally, relatively low δ34S values exhibit a lower proportion (less than 20%) of seawater-derived components. The geochemical signatures suggest that sediment samples from Wocan-2 has undergone moderate–extensive oxidation and secondary alterations by seawater in a low–intermediate temperature hydrothermal environments. Additionally, the significant δ34S values of station TVG-05 exhibit a higher estimated proportion (up to 41%) of seawater-derived components. Our results showed pervasive hydrothermal contributions into station TVG-08 relative to TVG-07, it further showed the increased process of seafloor weathering at TVG-05 relative to TVG-10.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 14
Author(s):  
Liudmila Demina ◽  
Irina Gablina ◽  
Olga Dara ◽  
Dmitry Budko ◽  
Nina Gorkova ◽  
...  

We examined the distribution of Fe, Mn, Cu, Zn, and Pb in one core of metalliferous, and one core of non-mineralized (background) carbonate sediments (located 69 km northwards), from the Pobeda hydrothermal field. Mechanisms of metal accumulation in sediments (12 samples) were evaluated based on sequential extraction of geochemical fractions, including mobile (exchangeable complex, authigenic Fe-Mn hydroxides, and sulfides), and lithogenic (fixed in crystalline lattices) forms. Maps of element distribution in sediment components were obtained using a scanning electron microscope equipped with an energy-dispersive spectrometry detector. In metalliferous sediments, according to X-ray diffraction data, the main Fe mineral phase was goethite FeOOH (37–44% on a carbonate-free basis). The contents of Fe and Mn reached 31.6 and 0.18%, respectively, whereas concentrations of Cu, Zn and Pb were 0.98, 0.36, and 0.059%. The coefficient of metal enrichment relative to background values varied from 16 to 125 times. The exception was Mn, for which no increased accumulation was recorded. Essential mass of Fe (up to 70% of total content) was represented by the residual fraction composed of crystallized goethite, aluminosilicates, the minerals derived from bedrock destruction processes. Among geochemically mobile fractions, 90–97% of total Fe was found in the form of authigenic oxyhydroxides. The same fraction was the predominant host for Mn in both metalliferous and background sediments (55–85%). A total of 40–96 % of Cd, Cu, Zn, and Pb were associated with these Fe and Mn fractions. The sulfide fraction amounted to roughly 10% of each metal. In metalliferous sediment core, the maximum concentrations of metals and their geochemically mobile fractions were recorded in deeper core intercepts, an observation that might be attributed to influence of hydrothermal diffused fluids. Our data suggested that metals are mostly accumulated in carbonate sediments in their contact zone with the underlying serpentinized basalts.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 636-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon P. VanderBeek ◽  
Douglas R. Toomey ◽  
Emilie E. E. Hooft ◽  
William S. D. Wilcock
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 4342-4355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Turner ◽  
Richard F. Katz ◽  
Mark D. Behn ◽  
Tobias Keller

1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (8) ◽  
pp. 1199-1208 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Tuzo Wilson

Until a little more than a century ago the land surface not only was the only part of the Earth accessible to humans but also was the only part for which geophysical and geochemical methods could then provide any details. Since then scientists have developed ways to study the ocean floors and some details of the interior of the Earth to ever greater depths. These discoveries have followed one another more and more rapidly, and now results have been obtained from all depths of the Earth.New methods have not contradicted or greatly disturbed either old methods or old results. Hence, it has been easy to overlook the great importance of these recent findings.Within about the last 5 years the new techniques have mapped the pattern of convection currents in the mantle and shown that these rise from great depths to the surface. Even though the results are still incomplete and are the subject of debate, enough is known to show that the convection currents take two quite different modes. One of these breaks the strong lithosphere; the other moves surface fragments and plates about.It is pointed out that if expanding mid-ocean ridges move continents and plates, geometrical considerations demand that the expanding ridges must themselves migrate. Hence, collisions between ridges and plates are likely to have occurred often during geological time.Twenty years ago it was shown that the effect of a "mid-ocean ridge in the mouth of the Gulf of Aden" was to enter and rift the continent. This paper points out some of the conditions under which such collisions occur and in particular shows that the angle of incidence between a ridge and a coastline has important consequences upon the result. Several past and present cases are used to illustrate that collisions at right angles tend to produce rifting; collisions at oblique angles appear to terminate in the lithosphere in coastal shears, creating displaced terrane, but in the mantle the upward flow may continue to uplift the lithosphere far inland and produce important surface effects; collisions between coasts and mid-ocean ridges parallel to them produce hot uplifts moving inland. For a time these upwellings push thrusts and folds ahead of them, but they appear to die down before reaching cratons.


2014 ◽  
Vol 197 (3) ◽  
pp. 1884-1884
Author(s):  
Jenny Collier
Keyword(s):  

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