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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 105, NO. B7,
PAGES 16,527–16,539,
2000
A fossil, serpentinization-related hydrothermal vent, Ocean Drilling Program Leg 173, Site 1068 (Iberia Abyssal Plain): Some
aspects of mineral and fluid chemistry
James S. Beard
Virginia Museum of Natural History, Martinsville
Laurence Hopkinson
School of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Southampton Oceanography Centre, Southampton, England, United Kingdom
Abstract
The basement at Site 1068, Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 173 (serpentinized peridotite in fault contact with overlying
amphibolite-clast-dominated sedimentary and tectonic breccias) is host to a hydrothermal system rooted in serpentinization
reactions occurring at depth. The serpentinite grades downward from cataclasites at the fault, through brecciated, recrystallized,
tochilinite-bearing serpentinite, to awaruite-bearing massive, mesh-textured serpentinite. Andradite is common throughout
and is a major sink for iron. The breccias are similarly zoned, from tectonized rocks near the fault upward into sedimentary
breccias. Mg-silicate vein assemblages and rodingitized amphibolite clasts near the fault give way to calcite veins and nonpervasive
albite-chlorite alteration upsection. Marcasite (± pyrrhotite at the fault) is the sulfide phase and occurs only in the tectonic
breccias. Fe oxides are magnetite near the fault and hematite and ferric oxyhydroxides upsection. The zonation reflects mixing
of seawater with a fluid whose composition (low fO2 , fS2 Si, CO2, high Ca, Fe, Ca/Mg, pH) is controlled by serpentinization reactions. The deepest serpentinites have strongly reduced mineral
assemblages that are unusual in a totally serpentinized peridotite. This probably reflects equilibration with a fluid derived
from ongoing serpentinization at depth. The upper serpentinites, on through the mineral sequences seen in the breccias reflect
increasing input from seawater upsection. Increased fO2 and fS2 stabilizes increasingly S- and O-rich assemblages. Calcite (and ferric oxide) precipitation decreases pH, stabilizing marcasite.
Relative to mid-ocean ridge hydrothermal systems, fluids in serpentinite-hosted hydrothermal systems are poor in S and rich
in Mg and are unlikely to host large sulfide ore deposits.
Received 4
May
1999;
accepted 29
February
2000.
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Citation: Beard, J. S., and L. Hopkinson
(2000),
A fossil, serpentinization-related hydrothermal vent, Ocean Drilling Program Leg 173, Site 1068 (Iberia Abyssal Plain): Some
aspects of mineral and fluid chemistry,
J. Geophys. Res.,
105(B7),
16,527–16,539.
Copyright 2000 by the American Geophysical Union.
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