Journal
MARINE GEOLOGY
Volume 245, Issue 1-4, Pages 20-39Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.margeo.2007.05.007
Keywords
rainbow vent field; Mid-Atlantic ridge; serpentinite; seafloor hydrothermal systems; volcanic-hosted massive sulfide deposits
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The Rainbow vent field is an ultramafic rock-hosted seafloor hydrothermal system located on the Mid-Atlantic ridge issuing high temperature, acidic, metal-rich fluids. Hydrothermal products include Cu-Zn-(Co)-rich massive sulfides with characteristics comparable to those found in mafic volcanic-hosted massive sulfide deposits. Petrography, mineralogy and geochemistry of nonmineralized and mineralized rocks sampled in the Rainbow vent field indicate that serpentinized peridotites host the hydrothermal vent system but serpentinization reactions occurred prior to and independently of the sulfide mineralization event. The onset of sulfide mineralization is reflected by extensive textural and chemical transformations in the serpentine-group minerals that show clear signs of hydrothermal corrosion. Element remobilization is a recurrent process in the Rainbow vent field rocks and, during simple peridotite serpentinization, Ni and Cr present in olivine and pyroxene are incorporated in the pseudomorphic serpentine mesh and bastite, respectively. Ni is later remobilized from pseudomorphic serpentine into the newly formed sulfides as a result of extensive hydrothermal alteration. Bulk-rock geochemistry and correlation coefficients discriminate the different processes: serpentinization, sulfide mineralization and superficial seafloor low-temperature processes related to the circulation of seawater (e.g. carbonatization, sulfide oxidation and B and U uptake). (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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