STRONTIUM AND OXYGEN ISOTOPIC CONSTRAINTS ON FLUID MIXING, ALTERATIONAND MINERALIZATION IN THE TAG HYDROTHERMAL DEPOSIT

Citation
Dah. Teagle et al., STRONTIUM AND OXYGEN ISOTOPIC CONSTRAINTS ON FLUID MIXING, ALTERATIONAND MINERALIZATION IN THE TAG HYDROTHERMAL DEPOSIT, Chemical geology, 149(1-2), 1998, pp. 1-24
Citations number
57
Categorie Soggetti
Geochemitry & Geophysics
Journal title
ISSN journal
00092541
Volume
149
Issue
1-2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1 - 24
Database
ISI
SICI code
0009-2541(1998)149:1-2<1:SAOICO>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Strontium- and oxygen-isotopic measurements of samples recovered from the Trans-Atlantic Geotraverse (TAG) hydrothermal mound during Leg 158 of the Ocean Drilling Program provide important constraints on the na ture of fluid-rock interactions during basalt alteration and mineraliz ation within an active hydrothermal deposit. Fresh Mid-Ocean Ridge Bas alt (MORB), with a Sr-87/Sr-86 of 0.7026, from the basement beneath th e TAG mound was altered at both low and high temperatures by seawater and altered at high temperature by near end-member black smoker fluids . Pillow breccias occurring beneath the margins of the mound are local ly recrystallized to chlorite by interaction with large volumes of con ductively heated seawater (> 200 degrees C). The development of a sili cified, sulfide-mineralized stockwork within the basaltic basement fol lows a simple paragenetic sequence of chloritization followed by miner alization and the development of a quartz + pyrite + paragonite stockw ork cut by quartz-pyrite veins. Initial alteration involved the develo pment of chloritic alteration halos around basalt clasts by reaction w ith a Mg-bearing mixture of upwelling, high-temperature (> 300 degrees C), black smoker-type fluid with a minor (< 10%) proportion of seawat er. Continued high-temperature (> 300 degrees C) interaction between t he wallrock and these Mg-bearing fluids results in the complete recrys tallization of the wallrock to chlorite + quartz + pyrite. The quartz + pyrite + paragonite assemblage replaces the chloritized basalts, and developed by reaction at 250-360 degrees C with end-member hydrotherm al fluids having Sr-87/Sr-86 approximate to 0.7038, similar to present -day vent fluids. The uniformity of the Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios of hydrothe rmal assemblages throughout the mound and stockwork requires that the Sr-87/Sr-86 ratio of end-member hydrothermal fluids has remained relat ively constant for a time period longer than that required to change t he interior thermal structure and plumbing network of the mound and un derlying stockwork. Precipitation of anhydrite in breccias and as late -stage veins throughout most of the mound and stockwork, down to at le ast 125 mbsf, records extensive entrainment of seawater into the hydro thermal deposit. Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios indicate that most of the anhydrit e formed from approximate to 2:1 mixture of seawater and black smoker fluids (65% +/- 15% seawater). Oxygen-isotopic compositions imply that anhydrite precipitated at temperatures between 147 degrees C and 270 degrees C and require that seawater was conductively heated to between 100 degrees C and 180 degrees C before mixing and precipitation occur red. Anhydrite from the TAG mound has a Sr-Ca partition coefficient K- d = 0.60 +/- 0.28 (2 sigma ). This value is in agreement with the rang e of experimentally determined partition coefficients (K-d approximate to 0.27-0.73) and is similar to those calculated for anhydrite from a ctive black smoker chimneys from 21 degrees N on the East Pacific Rise . The delta(18)O(SO4) of TAG anhydrite brackets the value of seawater sulfate oxygen (approximate to 9.5 parts per thousand). Dissolution of anhydrite back into the oceans during episodes of hydrothermal quiesc ence provides a mechanism of buffering seawater sulfate oxygen to an i sotopically light composition, in addition to the precipitation and di ssolution of anhydrite within the oceanic basement during hydrothermal recharge at the mid-ocean ridges. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.