Title of article
Low silica activity for hydrogen generation during serpentinization: An example of natural serpentinites in the Mineoka ophiolite complex, central Japan
Author/Authors
Katayama، نويسنده , , Ikuo and Kurosaki، نويسنده , , Iori and Hirauchi، نويسنده , , Ken-ichi، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
6
From page
199
To page
204
Abstract
The textural evolution in the serpentinite of the Mineoka ophiolite complex has been investigated to constrain the natural environment for hydrogen production in the serpentinite-hosted hydrothermal vent systems. Textural relations of the serpentinites from the Mineoka ophiolite indicate at least two stages in the process of serpentinization, with the replacement of olivine by a mesh texture of serpentine and brucite, followed by the development of magnetite-bearing or -free serpentine veins. The generation of hydrogen during serpentinization, which accompanies the formation of magnetite, involves a silica-depletion reaction, as evidenced by the low abundance of serpentine in the magnetite-bearing veins and the absence of magnetite in pseudomorphs of orthopyroxene. Direct evidence for the production of hydrogen and strongly reducing conditions is provided by CH4 and H2-bearing inclusions in relic olivine crystals; the production of methane and hydrogen may have provided a suitable environment for microbial activity in hydrothermal vent systems along the seafloor. Our results indicate that low silica activity plays a key role in the generation of hydrogen during serpentinization, and that low silica activity environments are possible in olivine-rich rocks such as dunite, or during local disequilibrium in other silica-poor rocks in the mantle lithosphere.
Keywords
Serpentinite , magnetite , Hydrogen , hydrothermal vent system , Microbial community , Silica activity
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number
2328577
Link To Document