Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9528954 | Chemical Geology | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Elemental sulfur and hydrogen sulfide emitted offshore of northeastern Taiwan known to local fishermen for generations, but never studied until recently, are found to have originated from a cluster of shallow (< 30 m depth) hydrothermal vents. Among the mounds is a massive 6 m high chimney with a diameter of 4 m at the base composed of almost pure sulfur and discharging hydrothermal fluid containing sulfur particles. The sulfur in the chimney has a δ34S = 1.1Ⱐthat is isotopically lighter than seawater. A yellow smoker at shallow depths with such characteristics has never been reported on anywhere else in the world. Gas discharges from these vents are dominated by CO2 (> 92%) with small amounts of H2S. Helium isotopic ratios 7.5 times that of air indicate that these gases originate from the mantle. High temperature hydrothermal fluids have measured temperatures of 78-116 °C and pH (25 °C) values as low as 1.52, likely the lowest to be found in world records. Low temperature vents (30-65 °C) have higher pH values. Continuous temperature records from one vent show a close correlation with diurnal tides, suggesting rapid circulation of the hydrothermal fluids.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Chen-Tung Arthur Chen, Zhigang Zeng, Fu-Wen Kuo, Tsanyao Frank Yang, Bing-Jye Wang, Yueh-Yuan Tu,