The Dacite-Hosted Pacmanus Hydrothermal Field, Eastern Manus Basin: Analog For Ancient Volcanogenic Massive Sulfide Ore Environments

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 92 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
Massive sulfides discovered in 1991 and further explored in 1993 in the eastern Manus back-arc basin, north of Papua New Guinea, represent one of the few modem seafloor occurrences known to he associated solely with highly siliceous volcanic rocks. As such they are very close analogs of ancient volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) ore deposits, and hence an excellent natural laboratory for developing new approaches for land-based VMS exploration. The Manus Basin lies between the active New Britain subduction zone and volcanic arc to its south and the opposed inactive Manus subduction trench to its north. It is being extended in a complex pattern of short neovolcanic zones and oblique transform faults. In its western sector, relatively mature back-arc spreading has created predominantly basaltic segments with characteristics and mineralization generally similar to those of mid- ocean ridges. At its far east, however, the basin is distinctly immature. The East Manus Volcanic Zone lies between two members of the Manus transform set, and is an en-echelon series of neovolcanic edifices constructed on extensionally thinned island arc crust formed during the earlier manus subduction episode. Individual edifices range from predominantly basaltic to predominantly dacitic in composition. Two of the edifices are known to be hydrothermally active, and a particulate plume with unknown source occurs in the seawater column above a third.
Citation
APA: (1993) The Dacite-Hosted Pacmanus Hydrothermal Field, Eastern Manus Basin: Analog For Ancient Volcanogenic Massive Sulfide Ore Environments
MLA: The Dacite-Hosted Pacmanus Hydrothermal Field, Eastern Manus Basin: Analog For Ancient Volcanogenic Massive Sulfide Ore Environments. International Marine Minerals Society, 1993.