26 research outputs found

    Boiling-induced formation of colloidal gold in black smoker hydrothermal fluids

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    Gold colloids occur in black smoker fluids from the Niua South hydrothermal vent field, Lau Basin (South Pacific Ocean), confirming the long-standing hypothesis that gold may undergo colloidal transport in hydrothermal fluids. Six black smoker vents, varying in temperature from 250 °C to 325 °C, were sampled; the 325 °C vent was boiling at the time of sampling and the 250 °C fluids were diffusely venting. Native gold particles ranging from <50 nm to 2 μm were identified in 4 of the fluid samples and were also observed to precipitate on the sampler during collection from the boiling vent. Total gold concentrations (dissolved and particulate) in the fluid samples range from 1.6 to 5.4 nM in the high-temperature, focused flow vents. Although the gold concentrations in the focused flow fluids are relatively high, they are lower than potential solubilities prior to boiling and indicate that precipitation was boiling induced, with sulfide lost upon boiling to exsolution and metal sulfide formation. Gold concentrations reach 26.7 nM in the 250 °C diffuse flow sample, and abundant native gold particles were also found in the fluids and associated sulfide chimney and are interpreted to be a product of colloid accumulation and growth following initial precipitation upon boiling. These results indicate that colloid-driven precipitation as a result of boiling, the persistence of colloids after boiling, and the accumulation of colloids in diffuse flow fluids are important mechanisms for the enrichment of gold in seafloor hydrothermal systems

    The role of nanoparticles in mediating element deposition and transport at hydrothermal vents

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    Precipitation processes in hydrothermal fluids exert a primary control on the eventual distribution of elements, whether that sink is in the subseafloor, hydrothermal chimneys, near-field metalliferous sediments, or more distal in the ocean basin. Recent studies demonstrating abundant nanoparticles in hydrothermal fluids raise questions as to the importance of these nanoparticles relative to macro minerals, as well as the fate of such particles in hydrothermal systems. Here we evaluate the particle geochemistry of black smoker fluids from Niua South vent field, including nanoparticles and macro minerals, in order to consider how the processes of mineral precipitation affect mineral size and morphology, and how this mineral precipitation may dictate element sinks as hydrothermal fluids begin to mix with seawater. We find that the Niua vent fluids are dominated by sulfide and sulfate minerals, with the mineralogy of major and minor minerals changing with temperature, degree of mixing with seawater and rate of precipitation. The majority of particles are submicron in size, and sulfide minerals become larger and exhibit more crystalline morphology with increasing seawater content in the fluids. Minor minerals include gold and bismuth tellurides, and nanoparticulate chalcopyrite and nano-zinc sulfide occur. These findings are consistent with major mineral classes and precipitation processes observed in other systems, while providing further insight into the details of mineral precipitation at Niua including the separate and combined influences of boiling, mixing and cooling during hydrothermal fluid transport and initial interactions with seawater. This work demonstrates that boiling and rapid mixing encourages the formation of nanoparticles, whereas conductive cooling encourages particle growth. Further, these data demonstrate that the possible influence of nanoparticles in hydrothermal systems are not restricted to enhancing element transport, but may also include restricting mineral growth and affecting physicochemical properties of hydrothermal chimneys

    Arctic deep water ferromanganese-oxide deposits reflect the unique characteristics of the Arctic Ocean

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    Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2017. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 18 (2017): 3771–3800, doi:10.1002/2017GC007186.Little is known about marine mineral deposits in the Arctic Ocean, an ocean dominated by continental shelf and basins semi-closed to deep-water circulation. Here, we present data for ferromanganese crusts and nodules collected from the Amerasia Arctic Ocean in 2008, 2009, and 2012 (HLY0805, HLY0905, and HLY1202). We determined mineral and chemical compositions of the crusts and nodules and the onset of their formation. Water column samples from the GEOTRACES program were analyzed for dissolved and particulate scandium concentrations, an element uniquely enriched in these deposits. The Arctic crusts and nodules are characterized by unique mineral and chemical compositions with atypically high growth rates, detrital contents, Fe/Mn ratios, and low Si/Al ratios, compared to deposits found elsewhere. High detritus reflects erosion of submarine outcrops and North America and Siberia cratons, transport by rivers and glaciers to the sea, and distribution by sea ice, brines, and currents. Uniquely high Fe/Mn ratios are attributed to expansive continental shelves, where diagenetic cycling releases Fe to bottom waters, and density flows transport shelf bottom water to the open Arctic Ocean. Low Mn contents reflect the lack of a mid-water oxygen minimum zone that would act as a reservoir for dissolved Mn. The potential host phases and sources for elements with uniquely high contents are discussed with an emphasis on scandium. Scandium sorption onto Fe oxyhydroxides and Sc-rich detritus account for atypically high scandium contents. The opening of Fram Strait in the Miocene and ventilation of the deep basins initiated Fe-Mn crust growth ∼15 Myr ago.National Science Foundation Grant Numbers: 1434493, 1713677; NSF-OCE Grant Number: 15358542018-05-0

    Chemistry, temperature, and faunal distributions at diffuse-flow hydrothermal vents : comparison of two geologically distinct ridge systems

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    Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of The Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 25, no. 1 (2012): 234–245, doi:10.5670/oceanog.2012.22.Diffuse-flow, low-temperature areas near hydrothermal vents support life via chemosynthesis: hydrogen sulfide (and other reduced chemical compounds) emanating from the subsurface is oxidized with bottom-water oxygen through bacterial mediation to fix carbon dioxide and produce biomass. This article reviews the in situ diffuse-flow chemistry (mainly H2S and O2) and temperature data collected in 2006 and 2009 along the Eastern Lau Spreading Center (ELSC), and from 2004 to 2008 at 9°N along the East Pacific Rise (9 N EPR), predominantly around macrofauna that contain endosymbionts at these two hydrothermal vent regions. More than 48,000 and 20,000 distinct chemical and temperature data points were collected with a multi-analyte electrochemical analyzer in the diffuse-flow waters at 9 N EPR and the ELSC, respectively. Despite their different geological settings and different macrofauna (two different species of snails and mussels at the ELSC versus two different species of tubeworms and mussels at 9 N EPR), there are similarities in the temperature and chemistry data, as well as in the distributions of organisms. The pattern of water chemistry preferred by the provannid snails (Alviniconcha spp., Ifremeria nautilei) and Bathymodiolus brevior at the ELSC is similar to the water chemistry pattern found for the siboglinid tubeworms (Tevnia jerichonana, Riftia pachyptila) and the Bathymodiolus thermophilus mussels at 9 N EPR. The eruptions at 9 N EPR in 2005 and 2006 resulted in increased H2S concentrations, increased H2S/T ratios, and an initial change in the dominant tubeworm species from Riftia pachyptila to Tevnia jerichonana after the eruption created new vent habitats. In 2005, two sites at 9 N EPR showed major increases in the H2S/T ratio from 2004, which suggested a probable eruption in this basalt-dominated system. At the ELSC, there was a decrease in the H2S/T ratio from northern to southern sites, which reflects the change in geological setting from basalt to andesite and the shallower water depths at the southern sites.This work was supported by NSF grants OCE-0240896, OCE-073243 (ELSC), OCE-0308398 (OTIC), OCE-0326434, and OCE-0937324 (EPR) to GWL; ESI-0087679, OCE-9529819, and OCE-0327353 to RAL; OCE-0327261, OCE-0328117, OCE-0451983 to TMS; and OCE 0240985 and OCE 0732333 to CRF

    Carbonate-hosted microbial communities are prolific and pervasive methane oxidizers at geologically diverse marine methane seep sites

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    At marine methane seeps, vast quantities of methane move through the shallow subseafloor, where it is largely consumed by microbial communities. This process plays an important role in global methane dynamics, but we have yet to identify all of the methane sinks in the deep sea. Here, we conducted a continental-scale survey of seven geologically diverse seafloor seeps and found that carbonate rocks from all sites host methane-oxidizing microbial communities with substantial methanotrophic potential. In laboratory-based mesocosm incubations, chimney-like carbonates from the newly described Point Dume seep off the coast of Southern California exhibited the highest rates of anaerobic methane oxidation measured to date. After a thorough analysis of physicochemical, electrical, and biological factors, we attribute this substantial metabolic activity largely to higher cell density, mineral composition, kinetic parameters including an elevated Vmax, and the presence of specific microbial lineages. Our data also suggest that other features, such as electrical conductance, rock particle size, and microbial community alpha diversity, may influence a sample's methanotrophic potential, but these factors did not demonstrate clear patterns with respect to methane oxidation rates. Based on the apparent pervasiveness within seep carbonates of microbial communities capable of performing anaerobic oxidation of methane, as well as the frequent occurrence of carbonates at seeps, we suggest that rock-hosted methanotrophy may be an important contributor to marine methane consumption.https://www.pnas.org/content/118/25/e200685711

    An Introduction to the Major Chemical Components Released from Hydrothermal Vents

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    Hydrothermal fluid forms as seawater are modified through interactions with heat and the earth's crust. These fluids emanate back into ocean water at hydrothermal vents on the seafloor. A major goal of the study of hydrothermal chemistry is to better constrain the impact that hydrothermal emissions have on the chemistry of the broader ocean, and how this chemistry differs between the varied vents found around the world's oceans. Here, processes and factors affecting the chemistry of hydrothermal fluid at high-temperature black smoker vents and the surrounding lower temperature diffuse flow zones are discussed. Chemical reactions that occur at vents are also considered, including organic synthesis and the formation of metal sulfides. The relationship between metals, sulfide, depth, spreading rate, and type of host system is explored through existing data. Because of the ongoing nature of this review, figures will be updated as more hydrothermal data are collected. This will provide both a basic introduction to hydrothermal chemistry and a data-driven review of the chemistry of high-temperature hydrothermal vents

    Iron and sulfide nanoparticle formation and transport in nascent hydrothermal vent plumes

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    There has been much interest recently in the transport mechanisms of metals from hydrothermal vents. Here the authors found that nanoparticulate pyrite is not removed from the plume and can account for over 50% of filtered iron one metre from the vent mouth
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