4.5 Article

Reconciling temperatures of metamorphism, fluid fluxes, and heat transport in the upper crust at intermediate to fast spreading mid-ocean ridges

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2007GC001787

Keywords

mid-ocean ridge; hydrothermal systems; metamorphism; fluid-rock reaction

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Current models of the mineralogical and chemical modification of the crust within mid-ocean ridge hydrothermal systems at intermediate to fast spreading ridges are difficult to reconcile with the temperature distribution predicted by the required fluid fluxes. In particular, the sharp increase in metamorphic grade passing down from the lavas into the sheeted dike complex places important constraints on the flow of fluid through the crust. This distribution of metamorphic temperatures has typically been discussed in terms of a step in permeability in the downwelling limb of a single-pass convection cell. Simple modeling of this system shows that downwelling fluid cools the crust too efficiently for high-temperature metamorphism of the upper dikes to occur in the downflow zone. In fact, temperatures throughout most of the sheeted dike complex are too high. Three alternative models are considered. Fluid-rock reaction during the cooling of each dike from magmatic temperatures is difficult to reconcile with cooling rate estimates for dikes, reaction rates required to grow metamorphic minerals, and the relatively constant composition of many hydrothermal vents. Metamorphism during reheating of the crust after fluid flow slows or stops is difficult to reconcile with the required fluid fluxes during metamorphism, based on the Sr-isotopic composition of the sheeted dike complex, and cannot produce high enough temperatures in the upper dikes and low temperatures in the lower lavas. In contrast, fluid-rock reaction in the sheeted dike complex as hot fluids migrate upward after being heated by the underlying magma source appears to be consistent with the data. In this model, downwelling seawater cools the recharge zone, and the fluid only becomes hot enough to significantly alter the crust once it approaches the conductive boundary layer overlying the magma chamber. Metamorphism of the sheeted dike complex then largely occurs in the discharge zone.

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