U-Th systematics and 230Th ages of carbonate chimneys at the Lost City Hydrothermal Field

Kristin A. Ludwig, Chuan Chou Shen, Deborah S. Kelley, Hai Cheng, R. Lawrence Edwards

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Abstract

The Lost City Hydrothermal Field (LCHF) is a serpentinite-hosted vent field located 15km west of the spreading axis of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. In this study, uranium-thorium (U-Th) geochronological techniques have been used to examine the U-Th systematics of hydrothermal fluids and the 230Th ages of hydrothermally-precipitated carbonate chimneys at the LCHF. Fluid sample analyses indicate that endmember fluids likely contain only 0.0073ng/g U or less compared to 3.28±0.03ng/g of U in ambient seawater. For fluid samples containing only 2-21% ambient seawater (1.1-11mmol/kgMg), Th concentration is 0.11-0.13pg/g and surrounding seawater concentrations average 0.133±0.016pg/g. The 230Th/232Th atomic ratios of the vent fluids range from 1 (±10)×10-6 to 11 (±5)×10-6, are less than those of seawater, and indicate that the vent fluids may contribute a minor amount of non-radiogenic 230Th to the LCHF carbonate chimney deposits. Chimney 238U concentrations range from 1 to 10μg/g and the average chimney corrected initial δ234U is 147.2±0.8, which is not significantly different from the ambient seawater value of 146.5±0.6. Carbonate 232Th concentrations range broadly from 0.0038±0.0003 to 125±16ng/g and 230Th/232Th atomic ratios vary from near seawater values of 43 (±8)×10-6 up to 530 (±25)×10-3. Chimney ages, corrected for initial 230Th, range from 17±6yrs to 120±13kyrs. The youngest chimneys are at the intersection of two active, steeply-dipping normal faults that cut the Atlantis Massif; the oldest chimneys are located in the southwest portion of the field. Vent deposits on a steep, fault-bounded wall on the east side of the field are all <4kyrs old, indicating that mass wasting in this region is relatively recent. Comparison of results to prior age-dating investigations of submarine hydrothermal systems shows that the LCHF is the most long-lived hydrothermal system known to date. It is likely that seismic activity and active faulting within the Atlantis Massif and the Atlantis Fracture Zone, coupled with volumetric expansion of the underlying serpentinized host rocks play major roles in sustaining hydrothermal activity at this site. The longevity of venting at the LCHF may have implications for ecological succession of microorganisms within serpentinite-hosted vent environments.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1869-1888
Number of pages20
JournalGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Volume75
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2011

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