Tectono-Magmatic Controls for Seafloor Massive Sulfide Deposit (SMS) Formation in a Back-Arc Setting; a Clue to Exploration

International Marine Minerals Society
Toru Yamasaki
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
5
File Size:
159 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2018

Abstract

A concept of plate-tectonic controls for the formation of seafloor massive sulfide (SMS) deposits in back-arc settings was established by Franklin et al. (2005). According to Franklin et al. (2005), a consequence of extension and rifting is subsidence, thinning of the crust, and the rise of hot, athenospheric mantle into the base of the crust. Underplating of the crust by mafic magmas results in low-pressure partial melting of the hydrated crust at a <15-km depth, and the generation of felsic anhydrous melts. The rapid ascent of hot felsic melts, along with mantle-derived mafic melts, results in bimodal volcanism that characterizes rift and volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits (VMS) environments. The rapid and focused advection of the magmatic heat within the rift to the near-surface environment which are required to sustain vigorous long-lived VMS hydrothermal systems. Faults within rift environments may also allow seawater to penetrate into subvolcanic intrusions and mix with magmatically generated metalliferous fluid or allow a direct magmatic contribution from shallow crustal level (3–12 km) magma chambers (Franklin et al., 2005, and references therein). In addition, the caldera-forming processes are favorable for the formation of VMS deposits and the focused high heat flow and cross- stratal structural permeability that is restricted in time and space to caldera development provides an explanation for the clustering of VMS deposits and their restriction to specific time-stratigraphic intervals and structures in the evolution of submarine central volcanic complexes (Franklin et al., 2005, and references therein). The concept is persuasive, although it is based on a series of logically constructed reviews mainly focused on ancient on-land deposits.
Citation

APA: Toru Yamasaki  (2018)  Tectono-Magmatic Controls for Seafloor Massive Sulfide Deposit (SMS) Formation in a Back-Arc Setting; a Clue to Exploration

MLA: Toru Yamasaki Tectono-Magmatic Controls for Seafloor Massive Sulfide Deposit (SMS) Formation in a Back-Arc Setting; a Clue to Exploration. International Marine Minerals Society, 2018.

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