| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9528956 | Chemical Geology | 2005 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
Coastal submarine hydrothermal venting occurs on the west shore of the fault-bounded bay of BahÃa Concepción, along a stretch of about 700 m of rocky shoreline. Diffuse hydrothermal seepage of water and continuous gas bubbling (mainly CO2 and N2) take place through the sediment-covered seafloor at shallow depth (5 to 15 m). In addition, at about 500 m SE, a cluster of hot springs occurs within the intertidal zone. The temperature and pH of the hydrothermal fluids varies from 72 to 87 °C and 5.95 to 6.02 in the submarine diffuse venting area and reaches 62 °C and pH of 6.68 in the intertidal hot springs. Mn-Ba-Hg mineralization is presently forming as a result of the hydrothermal venting. At the intertidal hot springs, moss-like crusts of manganese oxides and structureless detrital aggregates cemented by opal-A, barite and calcite occur around the main discharge conduits. These aggregates are overlaid by silica-carbonate fine-layered stromatolitic aggregates that extend some meters from the hot springs forming crusts and coalescing rims over volcanic pebbles and boulders. Manganese crusts are made up of barium rich, X-ray-amorphous todorokite-like and romanechite phases, and represent a rare example of a manganese deposit formed in a shallow submarine hydrothermal environment. In the submarine diffuse venting area the hydrothermal precipitates are less conspicuous and consist in millimeter-thick iron oxyhydroxide coatings on volcanic cobbles and boulders. These coatings are composed of poorly crystallized six-line ferrihydrite, accompanied by minor cinnabar and fine-grained colloform pyrite. Textures and fabrics of the mineral assemblages suggest microbial mediation for mineral deposition. The vent precipitates display a significant enrichment of Hg, As and Sb. Arsenic is probably adsorbed onto Mn- and Fe-oxide substrates. The NASC (North American Shale Composite)-normalized REE patterns of the vent precipitates show a pronounced positive Eu anomaly that is probably inherited from the hydrothermal fluid.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Carles Canet, Rosa MarÃa Prol-Ledesma, JoaquÃn Antonio Proenza, Marco Antonio Rubio-Ramos, Matthew J. Forrest, Marco Antonio Torres-Vera, Augusto Antonio RodrÃguez-DÃaz,
