4.5 Article

Highly alkaline, high-temperature hydrothermal fluids in the early Archean ocean

Journal

PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH
Volume 182, Issue 3, Pages 230-238

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.precamres.2010.08.011

Keywords

Archean chert; Banded iron formation; Basaltic greenstone; Carbonatization Silicification; Alkaline hydrothermal fluid

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Technology and Science, Japan
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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Based on the petrology of hydrothermally altered Archean basaltic greenstones, thermodynamic calculations of phase equilibria were conducted to estimate the composition of a high-temperature (similar to 350 degrees C) hydrothermal fluid in an Archean subseafloor basalt-hosted hydrothermal system. The results indicate that the hydrothermal fluid was highly alkaline attributed to the presence of calcite in the alteration minerals under a high-CO2 condition, and predict a generation of SiO2-rich, Fe-poor hydrothermal fluids in the Archean subseafloor hydrothermal system. The chemically reactive mixing zones between alkaline hydrothermal fluids and slightly acidic-neutral seawater are characterized by inverse pH and chemical polarity to modern hydrothermal systems, leading to extensive precipitation of silica and iron oxyhydroxides on/under the seafloor. Such processes can be responsible for the abiotic formation of voluminous chert and subseafloor silica dike, the mechanism of silicification, and the pH-controlled generation of banded iron formation that has been arising mainly from the redox chemistry in the Archean ocean. Such high-temperature alkaline fluids could have had a significant role not only in the early ocean geochemical processes but also in the early evolution of life. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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