4.5 Article

Nitrogen content and isotopic composition of oceanic crust at a superfast spreading ridge: A profile in altered basalts from ODP Site 1256, Leg 206

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2005GC001020

Keywords

nitrogen isotopes; ammonium; basalts; alteration processes; ODP Site 1256; geochemistry : composition of the oceanic crust; geochemistry : alteration and weathering; processes geochemistry : stable isotope geochemistry

Ask authors/readers for more resources

[1] The present paper provides the first measurements of both nitrogen content and isotopic composition of altered oceanic basalts. Samples were collected from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1256 located at the eastern flank of the East Pacific Rise. Twenty-five samples affected by low temperature alteration were analyzed. They include moderately altered basalts together with veins and related alteration halos and host rocks, as well as unique local intensely altered basalts showing green (celadonite-rich) and red ( iron oxyhydroxide-rich) facies. Nitrogen contents of moderately altered basalts range from 1.4 to 4.3 ppm and are higher than in fresh MORB. Their delta(15)N values vary in a large range from + 1.6 to + 5.8 parts per thousand. Veins, halos, and host rocks are all enriched in N relative to moderately altered basalts. Notably, veins show particularly high N contents (354 and 491 ppm) associated with slightly low delta(15)N values (+ 0.4 and - 2.1 parts per thousand). The intensely altered red and green facies samples display high N contents of 8.6 and 9.7 ppm, respectively, associated with negative delta(15)N values of - 3.8 and - 2.7 parts per thousand. Detailed petrological examination coupled with N content suggests that N of altered basalts occurs as ammonium ion (NH4+) fixed in various secondary minerals (celadonite, K- and Na-feldspars, smectite). A body of evidence indicates that N is enriched during alteration of oceanic basalts from ODP Site 1256, contrasting with previous results obtained on basalts from DSDP/ODP Hole 504B (Erzinger and Bach, 1996). Nitrogen isotope data support the interpretation that N in metasomatizing fluid occurred as N-2, derived from deep seawater and likely mixed with magmatic N-2 contained in basalt vesicles.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available