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G-Cubed: Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems; an electronic journal of the Earth sciences

 

Keywords

  • hydrothermal
  • ridge flank
  • Cocos Plate
  • seawater fluxes
  • pore water
  • nitrate

Index Terms

  • Marine Geology and Geophysics: Hydrothermal systems
  • Marine Geology and Geophysics: Marine hydrogeology
  • Geochemistry: Marine geochemistry
Abstract
Cited By (0)
 

Abstract

Massive, low-temperature hydrothermal flow from a basaltic outcrop on 23 Ma seafloor of the Cocos Plate: Chemical constraints and implications

C. Geoffrey Wheat

Global Undersea Research Unit, University of Alaska Fairbanks, P. O. Box 475, Moss Landing, California 95039, USA

Andrew T. Fisher

Earth and Planetary Sciences Department and Institute for Geophysics and Planetary Physics, University of California, 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA

Systematic variations in pore water chemical and thermal profiles from sediment gravity cores indicate the presence of a “cool” (10–20°C) ridge-flank hydrothermal system within basement surrounding Dorado outcrop, a small basaltic edifice on 23 Ma seafloor of the Cocos Plate. Dorado outcrop is located within a 14,500-km2 region of cool seafloor, where 60–90% of the lithospheric heat is removed advectively. Pore water chemical profiles from sediments on and near Dorado outcrop indicate a range of diffusive, advective, and diagenetic influences, including evidence for upward fluid seepage at up to several meters per year. The chemical composition of fluid that discharges from Dorado outcrop is only slightly different from that of bottom seawater. Pore water nitrate and geological constraints suggest a minimum volumetric flux per unit width of basement of 1800 m3 a−1 cm−1 and a total seawater flow through Dorado outcrop of ∼3000 kg a−1. This flow rate is orders of magnitude greater than that estimated from Baby Bare outcrop, a similarly sized basement edifice on younger seafloor on the eastern flank of the Juan de Fuca Ridge. The nearest likely basement recharge site is Tengosed Seamount located ∼20 km away. Calculated rates for the specific discharge at Dorado outcrop are consistent with young 14C ages, suggesting a residence time in basement no greater than a few hundred years. If the fluid exiting from Dorado outcrop is characteristic of ridge-flank hydrothermal circulation in general (cool, relatively unaltered), these systems can have an important influence on global geochemical budgets for many solutes (e.g., chloride, magnesium, sulfate, potassium, lithium, boron, silica, phosphate, manganese, and iron) because the rate of fluid discharge is so large. Ridge flank fluids having the same composition of fluid exiting Dorado outcrop also may contribute to subseafloor microbial processes within basaltic basement and the overlying sediment, and suggest that oxidation reactions within basaltic crust can continue well beyond 10 Ma in some settings.

Received 25 June 2008; accepted 21 October 2008; published 2 December 2008.

Citation: Wheat, C. G., and A. T. Fisher (2008), Massive, low-temperature hydrothermal flow from a basaltic outcrop on 23 Ma seafloor of the Cocos Plate: Chemical constraints and implications, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 9, Q12O14, doi:10.1029/2008GC002136.

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