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  4. Chemistry of hot springs along the Eastern Lau Spreading Center
 
Zitierlink DOI
10.26092/elib/3239
Verlagslink DOI
10.1016/j.gca.2010.12.008

Chemistry of hot springs along the Eastern Lau Spreading Center

Veröffentlichungsdatum
2011-02-15
Autoren
Mottl, Michael J.  
Seewald, Jeffrey S.  
Wheat, C.Geoffrey  
Tivey, Margaret K.  
Michael, Peter J.  
Proskurowski, Giora  
McCollom, Thomas M.  
Reeves, Eoghan  
Sharkey, Jessica  
You, C.-F.  
Chan, L.-H.  
Pichler, Thomas  
Zusammenfassung
The Eastern Lau Spreading Center (ELSC) is the southernmost part of the back-arc spreading axis in the Lau Basin, west of the Tonga trench and the active Tofua volcanic arc. Over its 397-km length it exhibits large and systematic changes in spreading rate, magmatic/tectonic processes, and proximity to the volcanic arc. In 2005, we collected 81 samples of vent water from six hydrothermal fields along the ELSC. The chemistry of these waters varies both within and between vent fields, in response to changes in substrate composition, temperature and pressure, pH, water/rock ratio, and input from magmatic gases and subducted sediment. Hot-spring temperatures range from 229° to 363 °C at the five northernmost fields, with a general decrease to the south that is reversed at the Mariner field. The southernmost field, Vai Lili, emitted water at up to 334 °C in 1989 but had a maximum venting temperature of only 121 °C in 2005, due to waning activity and admixture of bottom seawater into the subseafloor plumbing system. Chloride varies both within fields and from one field to another, from a low of 528 mmol/kg to a high of 656 mmol/kg, and may be enriched by phase separation and/or leaching of Cl from the rock. Concentrations of the soluble elements K, Rb, Cs, and B likewise increase southward as the volcanic substrate becomes more silica-rich, especially on the Valu Fa Ridge. Iodine and δ7Li increase southward, and δ11B decreases as B increases, apparently in response to increased input from subducted sediment as the arc is approached. Species that decrease southward as temperature falls are Si, H2S, Li, Na/Cl, Fe, Mn, and 87Sr/86Sr, whereas pH, alkalinity, Ca, and Sr increase. Oxygen isotopes indicate a higher water/rock ratio in the three systems on Valu Fa Ridge, consistent with higher porosity in more felsic volcanic rocks. Vent waters at the Mariner vent field on the Valu Fa Ridge are significantly hotter, more acid and metal-rich, less saline, and richer in dissolved gases and other volatiles, including H2S, CO2, and F, than the other vent fields, consistent with input of magmatic gases. The large variations in geologic and geophysical parameters produced by back-arc spreading along the ELSC, which exceed those along mid-ocean ridge spreading axes, produce similar large variations in the composition of vent waters, and thus provide new insights into the processes that control the chemistry of submarine hot springs.
Schlagwörter
hot springs

; 

Eastern Lau Spreading Center (ELSC)

; 

Lau Basin
Verlag
Elsevier Science
Institution
Universität Bremen  
Fachbereich
Fachbereich 05: Geowissenschaften (FB 05)  
Institute
Fachgebiet Geochemie und Hydrogeologie  
Dokumenttyp
Artikel/Aufsatz
Zeitschrift/Sammelwerk
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta  
Band
75
Heft
4
Startseite
1013
Endseite
1038
Zweitveröffentlichung
Ja
Dokumentversion
Postprint
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Sprache
Englisch
Dateien
Lade...
Vorschaubild
Name

Mottl_Pichler_et al_Chemistry of hot springs along the Eastern Lau Spreading Center_2011_accepted-version.pdf

Size

3.62 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum

(MD5):1d5361349176dcf5d9a16514af495b6c

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