4.5 Article

Chlorine isotope chemistry of serpentinites from Elba, Italy, as an indicator of fluid source and subsequent tectonic history

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2006GC001296

Keywords

serpentinites; serpentinization; chlorine stable isotopes; hydrogen stable isotopes; geochemistry : stable isotope geochemistry (0454,4870); marine geology and geophysics : ophiolites (8140); mineralogy and petrology : petrography, microstructures, and textures

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[1] Chlorine concentrations and delta Cl-37 and delta D values are reported for serpentinites in different tectonic positions on Elba, Italy. Serpentinites from high in the nappe sequence contain 0.01 - 0.1wt% Cl with delta Cl-37 values from - 0.9 to + 1.4 parts per thousand. Samples with positive delta Cl-37 values occur beneath gabbro and basalt and are interpreted as having been serpentinized by interaction with seawater. Samples with negative delta Cl-37 values are in direct contact with sedimentary rocks. These samples were juxtaposed against and/or buried by sediments in response to low-angle normal faulting on the seafloor, and serpentinization probably occurred by subsequent interaction with sedimentary pore fluids. Most samples from a structurally lower nappe and from areas affected by contact metamorphism lost their original Cl during heating. Low delta D values for all samples suggest postserpentinization interaction with meteoric water, but neither Cl nor O isotope ratios were affected by this interaction. Our results demonstrate that chlorine can be retained in obducted serpentinites up to low greenschist conditions and that the Cl isotope composition of such serpentinites preserves a record of seafloor tectonic processes.

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