Late seafloor carbonate precipitation in serpentinites from the Rainbow and Saldanha sites (Mid-Atlantic Ridge)
Late seafloor carbonate precipitation in serpentinites from the Rainbow and Saldanha sites (Mid-Atlantic Ridge)
European Journal of Mineralogy (May 2008) 20 (2): 173-181
- alkaline earth metals
- alteration
- aragonite
- Atlantic Ocean
- bottom water
- C-13/C-12
- carbon
- carbonates
- carbonatization
- electron probe data
- hydrothermal vents
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- low temperature
- metaigneous rocks
- metals
- metamorphic rocks
- metasomatic rocks
- Mid-Atlantic Ridge
- O-18/O-16
- ocean floors
- oxidation
- oxygen
- precipitation
- Rainbow hydrothermal field
- sea water
- serpentinite
- Sr-87/Sr-86
- stable isotopes
- strontium
- temperature
- water-rock interaction
- Saldanha Seamount
Serpentinized ultramafic rocks recovered during several recent oceanographic missions (1997-2002) on the Rainbow hydrothermal field and on the Saldanha seamount (36 degrees 14'N and 36 degrees 34'N, Mid-Atlantic Ridge) often exhibit late-stage carbonatization associated to secondary oxidation effects. These carbonate occurrences, mostly vein-filling aragonite, occasionally form dense webs almost completely engulfing and replacing the serpentinite itself. The (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr (approx. 0.709) and stable isotope signatures (delta (super 13) C (sub PDB) = 0.2-3.3 per mil; delta (super 18) O (sub V-SMOW) = 32.2-35.2 per mil) of the carbonate fraction in these serpentinites indicate carbonate precipitation from unmodified seawater, under abiotic conditions, and very low temperatures, close to bottom-water temperatures measured at the sampling stations. These analytical data imply that, unlike the serpentinite-hosted carbonate chimneys in the Lost City hydrothermal field (Ludwig et al., 2006), the vein-filling aragonite in the Rainbow and Saldanha serpentinites has a non-hydrothermal, low-temperature seawater origin.