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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Africa
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Pacific Ocean
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Southeast Pacific
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Lau Basin (1)
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North Pacific
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Northwest Pacific
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Mariana Trough (1)
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South Pacific
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Havre Trough (1)
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Southeast Pacific
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Southwest Pacific
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Bismarck Sea
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West Pacific
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Northwest Pacific
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Large-scale submarine landslides in the Barberton Greenstone Belt, southern Africa—Evidence for subduction and great earthquakes in the Paleoarchean
Fluid Inclusion Evidence for Subseafloor Magmatic-Hydrothermal Processes at Brothers Volcano, Kermadec Arc, New Zealand
Two Decades of Monitoring Hydrothermal Plumes at the Brothers Submarine Volcano, Kermadec Arc, New Zealand
Hydrothermal Alteration Within the Brothers Submarine Arc Volcano, Kermadec Arc, New Zealand
The Origin of Magmas and Metals at the Submarine Brothers Volcano, Kermadec Arc, New Zealand
Critical role of caldera collapse in the formation of seafloor mineralization: The case of Brothers volcano
Evidence for Remobilization of Barite Affecting Radiometric Dating Using 228 Ra, 228 Th, and 226 Ra/Ba Values: Implications for the Evolution of Sea-Floor Volcanogenic Massive Sulfides
Layered Hydrothermal Barite-Sulfide Mound Field, East Diamante Caldera, Mariana Volcanic Arc
High-Resolution Hydrothermal Mapping of Brothers Caldera, Kermadec Arc
Radiometric Dating of Volcanogenic Massive Sulfides and Associated Iron Oxide Crusts with an Emphasis on 226 Ra/Ba and 228 Ra/ 226 Ra in Volcanic and Hydrothermal Processes at Intraoceanic Arcs
Minerals, Inclusions and Volcanic Processes: keith D. Putirka and Frank J. Tepley III, Editors. Pp. 674. 2008. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry, v. 69, 2008. ISBN 978-0-939950-83-6. US$40.00.
Abstract Volcanic arcs that have a submarine component ( n = 21) include both intra-oceanic and island arcs. Combined, they have a total length of almost 22,000 km with ~93 percent in the Pacific region. We estimate that 696 volcanoes occur along these arcs, with at least 209 (30%) being submarine. The 13 best studied arcs total 14,260 km and include 526 volcanoes with a spacing of 22 to 32 km (mean = 27 km). Less than 3 percent of arc length has been systematically surveyed for sea-floor hydrothermal emissions. Submarine hydrothermal venting along these arcs therefore remains overwhelmingly undetected. The southern Kermadec arc northeast of New Zealand represents ~260 km of intra-oceanic arc that has been systematically surveyed for hydrothermal plumes. Here, seven of the 13 (55%) volcanoes surveyed are hydrothermally active. Depths to the vents range between 250 and 1,660 m below sea level. Venting is characterized by hydrothermal plumes that are chemically heterogeneous when compared to midocean ridge sites, i.e., they range from being highly enriched in dissolved ionic species (e.g., Fe) and 3 He, CO 2 , and sulfur gases, to 3 He rich but with very low concentrations of ionic species. By contrast, surveys of the Tabar-Lihir-Tanga-Feni island arc offshore Papua New Guinea and the Ghizo Ridge fore-arc offshore the Solomon Islands show no detectable submarine hydrothermal activity. Instead, hydrothermal and volcanic activity is confined to the summits of subaerial islands, as illustrated by the Luise volcano on Lihir Island, which is host to the giant Ladolam gold deposit. The Izu-Bonin intra-oceanic arc extends for 1,200 km south from Japan and is host to 26 submarine volcanoes. Myojin Knoll is a caldera volcano that has a number of hydrothermal vents (180°–330°C) in association with the large (~9 × 10 6 t) gold-rich Sunrise massive sulfide deposit. Suiyo seamount is also host to numerous hydrothermal vents (up to 317°C) associated with sulfide chimneys and mounds. These are the only two submarine arc-related hydrothermal systems for which a complete suite of vent fluid analyses has been obtained. Thirty-one active vent sites (for the period 1984–2002) have been documented worldwide on submarine arc volcanoes; circumstantial evidence suggests hydrothermal activity at an additional 11 sites. Twothirds of these sites occur in water depths of <1,000 m. The injection of hydrothermal emissions into the mid and upper levels of the oceans has implications for tracer studies of mid-depth geostrophic flow. The shallowest vent sites can deliver Fe to the euphotic zone (100- to 200-m water depth) thus giving arc-related vent sites an environmental influence generally lacking at midocean ridges. Magma bodies underlying vent sites in arc settings may play a significant role in the supply of magmatic volatiles and metals to their overlying hydrothermal systems. The shallower hydrothermal circulation cells expected on arc volcanoes, relative to midocean ridges, implies that any magmatic fluid component will be more evident in the expelled vent fluids. The venting of hydrothermal systems at relatively shallow depths and with high gas contents will assist phase separation and should promote the formation of economic massive sulfide (Cu-Zn ± Pb ± Au) deposits, making them attractive for exploration and possible exploitation.