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Hydrothermal vent deposits chimneys

Modem hydro- High-temperature hydrothermal vents currently active at mid-ocean ridges offer a thermal mineral- unique opportunity to study a hydrothermal mineral deposit in the process of ization at formation. The current working model assumes that cold seawater sulphate is mid-ocean ridges drawn down into sea-floor basalts, where it is heated in the vicinity of a magma chamber. Some sulphate is precipitated as anhydrite whilst the remainder is reduced to sulphide by reaction with the basalt. The fluid is vented back onto the seafloor at about 350 C laden with sulphides. On mixing with seawater these are precipitated onto the sea floor as a fine sulphide sediment whilst at the vent site itself the sulphides are built into a chimney a metre or so in height. [Pg.312]

Deposits which are forming are frequentiy characterized by venting streams of hot (300°C) mineralized fluid known as smokers. These result in the local formation of metalliferous mud, rock chimneys, or mounds rich in sulfides. In the upper fractured zone or deep in the rock mass beneath the vents, vein or massive sulfide deposits may be formed by the ckculating fluids and preserved as the cmstal plates move across the oceans. These off-axis deposits are potentially the most significant resources of hydrothermal deposits, even though none has yet been located. [Pg.288]

Farrell and Holland (1983) cited ba,sed on Sr isotope study on anhydrite and barite in Kuroko deposits that the most appealing model for the formation of Kuroko strata-bound ores would seem to entail precipitation of the minerals from a hydrothermal solution within the discharge vent or in the interior of a hydrothermal plume formed immediately below above the vent exit in the overlying seawater (Eldridge et al., 1983). The study on the chimney ores from Kuroko deposits support this model which is discussed below. [Pg.366]

At typical black smoker vents, a very large proportion (at least 90%) of the metals and sulfur carried in solution are lost to a hydrothermal plume in the overlying water column rather than deposited as chimneys. The metals are precipitated as sulfide particles in the plume above the black smokers and are rapidly oxidized and dispersed over distances of several kilometers from the vent (Feely et al. 1987, 1994a,b Mottl and McConachy 1990). Due to oxidation and dissolu-... [Pg.464]


See other pages where Hydrothermal vent deposits chimneys is mentioned: [Pg.66]    [Pg.370]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.255]    [Pg.457]    [Pg.330]    [Pg.756]    [Pg.370]    [Pg.496]    [Pg.1130]    [Pg.3055]    [Pg.3056]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.489]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.103]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.379 , Pg.379 ]




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