Fluid Mixing and Spatial Geochemical Variability in the Lost City Hydrothermal Field Chimneys

Author:

Aquino Karmina A.12ORCID,Früh‐Green Gretchen L.1ORCID,Bernasconi Stefano M.1ORCID,Rickli Jörg1ORCID,Lang Susan Q.3ORCID,Lilley Marvin D.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Sciences ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

2. Now at Department of Science and Technology Philippine Nuclear Research Institute Quezon City Philippines

3. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole MA USA

4. School of Oceanography University of Washington Seattle WA USA

Abstract

AbstractCarbonate‐brucite chimneys are a characteristic of low‐ to moderate‐temperature, ultramafic‐hosted alkaline hydrothermal systems, such as the Lost City hydrothermal field located on the Atlantis Massif at 30°N near the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge. These chimneys form as a result of mixing between warm, serpentinization‐derived vent fluids and cold seawater. Previous work has documented the evolution in mineralogy and geochemistry associated with the aging of the chimneys as hydrothermal activity wanes. However, little is known about spatial heterogeneities within and among actively venting chimneys. New mineralogical and geochemical data (87Sr/86Sr and stable C, O, and clumped isotopes) indicate that the brucite and calcite precipitate at elevated temperatures in vent fluid‐dominated domains in the interior of chimneys. Exterior zones dominated by seawater are brucite‐poor and aragonite is the main carbonate mineral. Carbonates record mostly out of equilibrium oxygen and clumped isotope signatures due to rapid precipitation upon vent fluid‐seawater mixing. On the other hand, the carbonates precipitate closer to carbon isotope equilibrium, with dissolved inorganic carbon in seawater as the dominant carbon source and have δ13C values within the range of marine carbonates. Our data suggest that calcite is a primary mineral in the active hydrothermal chimneys and does not exclusively form as a replacement of aragonite during later alteration with seawater. Elevated formation temperatures and lower 87Sr/86Sr relative to aragonite in the same sample suggest that calcite may be the first carbonate mineral to precipitate.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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