Paleochemical Clues To Ancient Metalliferous Sediment Deposits: The Chinook Trough Hydrothermal Sequence

International Marine Minerals Society
Gerald R. Dickens
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
2
File Size:
396 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1994

Abstract

Massive sulfide ores and Fe-Mn oxyhydroxide precipitates represent two extremes of a spatial continuum of hydrothermal deposition along oceanic ridges. Elemental variations across this continuum are of interest to economic geologists as a prospective geochemical exploration tool. Theoretical considerations suggest that certain physical and chemical parameters can be used to model compositional variations within the far-field (i.e., Fe-Mn oxyhydroxide) component as a function of distance from ridge axis; however, testing and verification of such models generally has been precluded because the few available distal hydrothermal sediment sequences have been sampled at low resolution and/or are highly diluted with biogenic components (e.g., siliceous and calcareous tests). Recent ocean drilling (ODP Leg 145; Sites 885/886) in the North Pacific successfully recovered an extensive record of "biogenic-free" distal hydrothermal precipitates from an area approximately 60 km south of the Chinook Trough at longitude 168.1 °W. Geophysical and geomorphological evidence suggests the Chinook Trough is the southern lithospheric scar marking initiation of late Cretaceous north-south rifting, implying that recovered hydrothermal materials record distal hydrothermal precipitation from the now-subducted Kula-Pacific spreading ridge. The Chinook Trough hydrothermal sequence is a continuous 15 my record of "biogenic-free" hydrothermal Fe-Mn oxyhydroxide precipitation mixed with eolian clays. It was deposited during the late Cretaceous, early Paleocene (80-65 Ma) as the perpendicular distance from ridge axis increased from 75 to 600 km. A high-resolution geochemical analysis of this hydrothermal sequence reveals distinct trends for the up-core (equivalent to increasing distance from ridge) distribution patterns of Fe, Sc, As, and rare earth elements (REE). Iron concentrations exhibit an S-shape distribution pattern with respect to increasing
Citation

APA: Gerald R. Dickens  (1994)  Paleochemical Clues To Ancient Metalliferous Sediment Deposits: The Chinook Trough Hydrothermal Sequence

MLA: Gerald R. Dickens Paleochemical Clues To Ancient Metalliferous Sediment Deposits: The Chinook Trough Hydrothermal Sequence. International Marine Minerals Society, 1994.

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