4.7 Article

Geochemistry and geobiology of a present-day serpentinization site in California: The Cedars

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 109, Issue -, Pages 222-240

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2013.01.043

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Carnegie Institution of Washington
  2. Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research in Astrobiology
  3. United States National Science Foundation [1024872]
  4. NASA Astrobiology Institute through Cooperative Agreement [NNA04CC09A]
  5. Division Of Earth Sciences
  6. Directorate For Geosciences [1024872, 1638216] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Ultra-basic (pH 11-12) reducing (-656 to -585 mV) groundwater springs discharging from serpentinized peridotite of The Cedars, CA, were investigated for their geochemistry and geobiology. The spring waters investigated were of meteoric origin; however, geochemical modeling suggests that there were two sources of groundwater, a shallow source with sufficient contact with The Cedars' peridotite body to be altered geochemically by serpentinization, and a deeper groundwater source that not only flows through the peridotite body but was also in contact with the marine sediments of the Franciscan Subduction Complex (FSC) below the peridotite body. We propose that the groundwater discharging from lower elevations (GPS1 and CS1) reflect the geochemistry of the deeper groundwater in contact with FSC, while groundwaters discharging from springs at higher elevations (NS1 and BSC) were a mixture of the shallow peridotite-only groundwater and the deeper groundwater that has been in contact with the FSC. Cell densities of suspended microbes within these waters were extremely low. In the NS1 and BSC spring fluids, cell densities ranged from 10(2) to 10(3) cells/ml, while suspended cells at GPS were lower than 10 cells/mL. However, glass slides incubated in the BSC and GPS1 springs for 2-3 weeks were colonized by cells with densities ranging from 10(6) to 10(7) cells/cm(2) attached to their surfaces. All of the springs were very low (<= 1 mu M) in several essential elements and electron acceptors (e. g. nitrate/ammonium, sulfate, and phosphate) required for (microbial) growth, which is not uncommon at sites of continental serpentinization. Gases rich in N-2, H-2, and CH4 were exsolving from the springs. The stable carbon isotope value (delta C-13(CH4) = -68 +/- 0.6 parts per thousand) and the CH4/C2+ (>10(3)) of methane and other gaseous hydrocarbons exsolving from NS1 were typical of microbially sourced methane, whereas the isotope values and the CH4/C2+ of BSC and CS1 springs were more enriched in C-13 and had CH4/C2+ < 10(3), suggesting a mixture of microbial and non-microbial methane. The concentrations of aromatic compounds, and ethane, propane, iso- and n-butane were well described by simple physical mixing between the aromatic- and alkane-poor, shallow groundwater and the relatively aromatic, and alkane-rich groundwater that flows through both the peridotite and the FSC suggesting that these aromatic and alkane compounds originated in the deeper FSC groundwater and are not produced in the shallow peridotite-only groundwater. The aromatic compounds most probably originated from the diagenesis/degradation of organic matter in the marine sediments below the peridotite body, while the gaseous alkanes may have multiple sources including thermal degradation of the organic matter in the marine sediments below the peridotite body and possibly by abiogenic reactions occurring within the peridotite body. This geochemical study demonstrates the complexity of The Cedars, and the possible sources of hydrocarbons at continental sites of serpentinization. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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