4.6 Article

Geochemistry of CO2-Rich Gases Venting From Submarine Volcanism: The Case of Kolumbo (Hellenic Volcanic Arc, Greece)

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2019.00060

Keywords

Hellenic Volcanic Arc; Kolumbo submarine volcano; submarine gases; gas-water interaction; hydrothermal system; CO2; CH4

Funding

  1. SeaBioTech project - European Commission within its FP7 Programme [311932]
  2. INGV, Sezione di Palermo

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Studies of submarine hydrothermal systems in Mediterranean Sea are limited to the southern Italian volcanism, while are totally missing in the Aegean. Here, we report on the geochemistry of high-temperature fluids (up to 220 degrees C) venting at 500 m b.s.l. from the floor of Kolumbo submarine volcano (Hellenic Volcanic Arc, Greece), which is located 7 km northeast of Santorini Island. Despite the recent unrest at Santorini, Kolumbo submarine volcano is considered more active due to a higher seismicity. Rizzo et al. (2016) investigated the He-isotope composition of gases collected from seven chimneys and showed that are dominated by CO2 (> 97%), with only a small air contamination. Here we provide more-complete chemical data and isotopic compositions of CO2 and CH4, and Hg(O) concentration. We show that the gases emitted from different vents are fractionated by the partial dissolution of CO2 in water. Fractionation is also evident in the C-isotope composition (delta C-13(CO2)), which varies between -0.04 and 1.15 parts per thousand. We modeled this process to reconstruct the chemistry and delta C-13(CO2) of intact magmatic gases before fractionation. We argue that the CO2 prior to CO2 dissolution in water had delta C-13 similar to-0.4 h and CO2/He-3 similar to 1 x 10(10). This model reveals that the gases emitted from Kolumbo originate from a homogeneous mantle contaminated with CO2, probably due to decarbonation of subducting limestone, which is similar to other Mediterranean arc volcanoes (e.g., Stromboli, Italy). The isotopic signature of CH4 (delta C-13 similar to -18 h and delta D similar to -117 parts per thousand) is within a range of values typically observed for hydrothermal gases (e.g., Panarea and Campi Flegrei, Italy), which is suggestive of mixing between thermogenic and abiotic CH4. We report that the concentrations of Hg(O) in Kolumbo fluids are particularly high (similar to 61 to 1300 ng m(-3)) when compared to land-based fumaroles located on Santorini and worldwide aerial volcanic emissions. This finding may represent further evidence for the high level of magmatic activity at Kolumbo. Based on the geo-indicators of temperature and pressure, we calculate that the magmatic gases equilibrate within the Kolumbo hydrothermal system at about 270 degrees C and at a depth of similar to 1 km b.s.l.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available