Author/Authors :
Kailasa P،arinath، نويسنده , , Peter Dulski، نويسنده , , Ignacio S. Torres-Alvarado، نويسنده , , Surendra P. Verm، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The effects of hydrothermal alteration on major, rare-earth, and other trace-element concentrations in
rhyolitic rocks of the Los Azufres geothermal field, Mexico, were investigated by statistically comparing
the chemical compositions of altered drill cuttings (taken above 450m depth) with those of fresh rock
outcrop samples. Altered rhyolitic rocks show predominantly vitreous and fluidal textures, with alteration
products (mainly clay minerals, chlorites and, less commonly, sericite) comprising up to 40% of the rock
mass; cryptocrystalline quartz, chlorite, and zeolites fill fractures and vesicles. In altered rocks the greater
statistical variances of several elements (Y, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Lu, and Pb) are probably due to alteration effects,
whereas smaller variances for CaO, Sr, Rb/Sr, and Rb/Ba suggest that alteration processes have resulted
in more uniform chemical compositions. Only MnO, P2O5, Ta, Zr, and Nb have significantly different
concentrations in hydrothermal altered rocks as compared to fresh rocks. MnO, P2O5, Ta, Rb/Zr, and Rb/Nb
decrease, whereas Zr, Nb, and Nb/Y increase in the altered rocks. The present study stresses that caution
should be taken when using these chemical parameters for petrogenetic studies of old hydrothermally altered
areas, particularly with rhyolitic rocks. Rare-earth element (REE) concentrations were not significantly
different between fresh and altered rhyolitic rocks. This may indicate that these elements were relatively
immobile during the hydrothermal alteration processes affecting the rhyolites at Los Azufres, or morelikely that they were reincorporated into hydrothermal minerals after being mobilized from the primary
phases.
© 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Keywords :
Element mobility , rhyolites , Rare-earthelements , Mexico , geothermal systems , Water–rock interactions , MexicanVolcanic Belt , Los Azufres