Title of article :
Sources of REE in sediment cores from the Rainbow vent site (36°14′N, MAR)
Author/Authors :
Chavagnac، نويسنده , , Valérie and German، نويسنده , , Christopher R. and Milton، نويسنده , , J. Andrew and Palmer، نويسنده , , Martin R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
24
From page :
329
To page :
352
Abstract :
A geochemical investigation was carried out on two sediment cores collected at 2 and 5 km from the Rainbow hydrothermal vent site. Bulk sediment compositions indicate that these cores record clear enrichments in Fe, Cu, Mn, V, P and As from hydrothermal plume fallout (Cave et al., 2002) [Cave, R.R., German, C.R., Thomson, J., Nesbitt, R.W., 2002. Fluxes to sediments underlying the Rainbow hydrothermal plume at 36°14′N on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 66 (11), 1905–1923]. Sequential dissolution of the bulk sediments has been used to discriminate between a leach (biogenic and oxy-hydroxide) component and a residual phase (detrital and sulphide/sulphate fractions). Major element data (Al, Fe, Ti, Mn, Mg, Ca, Si and index%) reveal that the hydrothermal input, as recorded in the leach phase, is much stronger than apparent from bulk sediment analyses alone. REE patterns for the leach phase record contributions from both biogenic carbonate (mimicking seawater REE patterns) and hydrothermal oxy-hydroxides, with the latter exhibiting positive Eu anomalies (hydrothermal derived) and negative Ce anomalies (seawater derived). Based on major element and REE data, the residue contains contributions from aeolian dust input, local MORB material and a hydrothermal component. Ternary REE mixing calculations indicate that most of the REE within the residual fraction (∼80%) is derived from hydrothermal material, while detrital contributions to the REE budget, as deep-sea clay and volcanic debris, are <20%. By combining bulk and REE data for the various end-member components of the residue, we calculate that the chemical composition of the residue hydrothermal end-member is high in Ca (6–15%) and with a Nd/Sr ratio of 0.004. These characteristics indicate the presence of low-solubility hydrothermal sulphate (rather than sulphide) material within the residue component of Rainbow hydrothermal sediments.
Keywords :
hydrothermal , Sequential dissolution , geochemistry , Rainbow vent field , REE , Sulphate , sediment
Journal title :
Chemical Geology
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Chemical Geology
Record number :
2257628
Link To Document :
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