Rare earth element distribution in >400 °C hot hydrothermal fluids from 5°S, MAR: The role of anhydrite in controlling highly variable distribution patterns

被引:50
作者
Schmidt, K. [1 ]
Garbe-Schoenberg, D. [2 ]
Bau, M. [1 ]
Koschinsky, A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Jacobs Univ Bremen, D-28759 Bremen, Germany
[2] Univ Kiel, Dept Geosci, D-24118 Kiel, Germany
关键词
MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE; EAST PACIFIC RISE; JUAN-DE-FUCA; CHLORO COMPLEXES; AQUEOUS-SOLUTIONS; ROCK INTERACTION; THEORETICAL CONSTRAINTS; ELEVATED-TEMPERATURES; SUPERCRITICAL REGION; MIDOCEAN RIDGES;
D O I
10.1016/j.gca.2010.04.007
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Two submarine hydrothermal vent fields at 5 degrees S, Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) - Turtle Pits and Comfortless Cove - emanate vapor-phase fluids at conditions close to the critical point of seawater (407 degrees C, 298 bars). In this study, the concentration and distribution of rare earth element (REE) and yttrium (Y) has been investigated. Independent of the major element composition, the fluids display a strong temporal variability of their REE + Y concentrations and relative distributions at different time scales of minutes to years. Chondrite-normalized distributions range from common fluid patterns with light REE enrichment relative to the heavy REE, accompanied by positive Eu anomalies (type 1), to strongly REE + Y enriched patterns with a concave-downward distribution with a maximum enrichment of Sm and weakly positive or even negative Eu anomalies (type II). The larger the sum of REE, the smaller Ce-CN/Yb-CN and Eu/Eu*. We also observed a strong variability in fluid flow and changing fluid temperatures, correlating with the compositional variability. As evident by the positive correlation of total REE, Ca, and Sr concentrations in Turtle Pits and Comfortless Cove fluids, precipitation/dissolution of hydrothermal anhydrite controls the variability in REE concentrations and distributions in these fluids and the transformation of one fluid type to the other. The variable distribution of REE can be explained by the accumulation of particulate anhydrite (with concave-downward REE distribution and negative Eu anomaly) into a fluid with common REE distribution (type 1), followed by the modification of the REE fluid signature due to dissolution of incorporated anhydrite. A second model, in which the type II fluids represent a primary REE reaction zone fluid pattern, which is variably modified by precipitation of anhydrite, can also explain the observed correlations of total REE, fractionation of LREE/HREE and size of Eu anomaly as well as Ca, Sr. The emanation of such a fluid may be favored in a young hydrothermal system in its high-activity phase with short migration paths and limited exchange with secondary minerals. However, this model is not as well constrained as the other and requires further investigations. The strongly variable REE fluid signature is restricted to the very hot, actively phase-separating hydrothermal systems Turtle Pits and Comfortless Cove at 5 degrees S and has not been observed at the neighboring Red Lion vent field, which continuously emanates 350 degrees C hot fluid and displays a stable REE distribution (type D. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:4058 / 4077
页数:20
相关论文
共 78 条
[1]   REE controls in ultramafic hosted MOR hydrothermal systems: An experimental study at elevated temperature and pressure [J].
Allen, DE ;
Seyfried, WE .
GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2005, 69 (03) :675-683
[2]   ABUNDANCES OF THE ELEMENTS - METEORITIC AND SOLAR [J].
ANDERS, E ;
GREVESSE, N .
GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 1989, 53 (01) :197-214
[3]   Rare earth element mobility in the oceanic lower sheeted dyke complex: evidence from geochemical data and leaching experiments [J].
Bach, W ;
Irber, W .
CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 1998, 151 (1-4) :309-326
[4]   Controls of fluid chemistry and complexation on rare-earth element contents of anhydrite from the Pacmanus subseafloor hydrothermal system, Manus Basin, Papua New Guinea [J].
Bach, W ;
Roberts, S ;
Vanko, DA ;
Binns, RA ;
Yeats, CJ ;
Craddock, PR ;
Humphris, SE .
MINERALIUM DEPOSITA, 2003, 38 (08) :916-935
[5]   Geochemistry of REE and yttrium in hydrothermal fluids from the Endeavour segment, Juan de Fuca Ridge [J].
Bao, Shen-Xu ;
Zhou, Huai-Yang ;
Peng, Xiao-Tong ;
Ji, Fu-Wu ;
Yao, Hui-Qiang .
GEOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 2008, 42 (04) :359-370
[6]   Geochemistry of low-temperature water-rock interaction: evidence from natural waters, andesite, and iron-oxyhydroxide precipitates at Nishiki-numa iron-spring, Hokkaido, Japan [J].
Bau, M ;
Usui, A ;
Pracejus, B ;
Mita, N ;
Kanai, Y ;
Irber, W ;
Dulski, P .
CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 1998, 151 (1-4) :293-307
[7]   Anthropogenic origin of positive gadolinium anomalies in river waters [J].
Bau, M ;
Dulski, P .
EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 1996, 143 (1-4) :245-255
[8]   COMPARATIVE-STUDY OF YTTRIUM AND RARE-EARTH ELEMENT BEHAVIORS IN FLUORINE-RICH HYDROTHERMAL FLUIDS [J].
BAU, M ;
DULSKI, P .
CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY, 1995, 119 (2-3) :213-223
[9]   RARE-EARTH ELEMENT MOBILITY DURING HYDROTHERMAL AND METAMORPHIC FLUID ROCK INTERACTION AND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE OXIDATION-STATE OF EUROPIUM [J].
BAU, M .
CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 1991, 93 (3-4) :219-230
[10]   Comparing yttrium and rare earths in hydrothermal fluids from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge: implications for Y and REE behaviour during near-vent mixing and for the Y/Ho ratio of Proterozoic seawater [J].
Bau, M ;
Dulski, P .
CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 1999, 155 (1-2) :77-90