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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Asia
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Far East
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Japan
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Honshu
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Akita Japan
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Hokuroku Japan (1)
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North Atlantic
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West Pacific
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Northwest Pacific
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Southwest Pacific
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commodities
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stable isotopes
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metals
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strontium
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noble gases
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helium
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oxygen
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sulfates
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oldhamite (1)
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pyrrhotite (2)
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troilite (1)
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wurtzite (2)
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zinc sulfides (1)
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Primary terms
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Asia
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Far East
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Japan
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Honshu
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Akita Japan
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Middle East
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Cyprus
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Atlantic Ocean
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North Atlantic
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Broken Spur hydrothermal field (2)
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Reykjanes Ridge (1)
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Australasia
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Australia
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Queensland Australia
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Mount Isa Inlier (1)
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Tasmania Australia (1)
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Western Australia
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Ocean Drilling Program
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Leg 193
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black smokers
Trace Element Mapping of Copper- and Zinc-Rich Black Smoker Chimneys from Brothers Volcano, Kermadec Arc, Using Synchrotron Radiation XFM and LA-ICP-MS
Deep-Ocean Mineral Resources
Modern Seafloor Hydrothermal Systems: New Perspectives on Ancient Ore-Forming Processes
Boiling-induced formation of colloidal gold in black smoker hydrothermal fluids
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
Rifting under steam—How rift magmatism triggers methane venting from sedimentary basins
Fault geometry and permeability contrast control vent temperatures at the Logatchev 1 hydrothermal field, Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Mineralogy and Formation of Black Smoker Chimneys from Brothers Submarine Volcano, Kermadec Arc
Submarine Magmatic-Hydrothermal Systems at the Monowai Volcanic Center, Kermadec Arc
Hydrothermal circulation and the dike-gabbro transition in the detachment mode of slow seafloor spreading
First active hydrothermal vents on an ultraslow-spreading center: Southwest Indian Ridge
Metals in deep liquid of the Reykjanes geothermal system, southwest Iceland: Implications for the composition of seafloor black smoker fluids
Study of Trace Element Zonation in Vent Chimneys from the Silurian Yaman-Kasy Volcanic-Hosted Massive Sulfide Deposit (Southern Urals, Russia) Using Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICPMS)
MINERALOGY OF MASSIVE SULFIDES FROM THE ASHADZE HYDROTHERMAL FIELD, 13°N, MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
Rudashevskyite, the Fe-dominant analogue of sphalerite, a new mineral: Description and crystal structure
Formation of the Tharsis Massive Sulfide Deposit, Iberian Pyrite Belt: Geological, Lithogeochemical, and Stable Isotope Evidence for Deposition in a Brine Pool
Oceanic detachment faults focus very large volumes of black smoker fluids
Australian Zn-Pb-Ag Ore-Forming Systems: A Review and Analysis
Chemical and biological evolution of early Earth: Constraints from banded iron formations
Geological and geochemical characteristics of banded iron formations (BIFs) suggest that they formed by mixing locally (or regionally) discharged submarine hydrothermal fluids with local seawater, rather than by upwelling deep ocean water. Submarine hydrothermal fluids typically evolved from local seawater by acquiring heat, metals, and sulfur during deep circulation through a variety of rocks (e.g., volcanics, evaporites) in greenstone terranes that developed under a variety of tectonic settings. In general, when the fluids were heated above ∼350 °C, they may have produced Cu- and Zn-rich volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits (VMSDs), whereas those heated less than ∼200 °C were generally poor in H 2 S and heavy metals, except Fe, and may have subsequently produced BIFs. Depending on the salinity contrast between discharging hydrothermal fluids (evolved seawater) and local seawater, hydrothermal fluids may (1) mix rapidly with local seawater to form smoker-type BIFs or (2) create a metal- and silica-rich brine pool, mix slowly with the overlying water body, and form brine pool-type BIFs. BIFs associated with VMSDs and volcanic rocks generally belong to smoker-type BIFs; many formed at seawater depths >2.5 km. Large BIFs, including the 2.6–2.4 Ga BIFs in the Hamersley Basin, Australia, the 2.5 Ga Kuruman IF in South Africa, and the 1.87 Ga BIFs in the Lake Superior region, United States-Canada, belong to brine pool-type BIFs. The Hamersley Basin and possibly other large BIF-hosting basins were probably land-locked seas (like the Black Sea) where river waters diluted the surface water zone and the underlying water bodies were anoxic. During the accumulation of a BIF sequence, the dominant Fe mineralogy frequently changed from ferric (hydr)oxides (oxide BIFs) to siderite (carbonate BIFs) and to pyrite (sulfide BIFs). Such changes were probably caused by changes in the relative amounts of dissolved O 2 (DO), ΣCO 3 2− , and ΣS 2− in local seawater. From the Fe 2+ -O 2 mass balance calculations for the formation of iron oxides in smoker-type BIFs, and the relationship between the atmospheric pO 2 and oceanic O 2 depth profile, we conclude that the atmosphere and oceans have been fully oxygenated since ca. 3.8 Ga, except in local anoxic basins. Thermodynamic analyses of the formational conditions of siderite and analyses of the carbon isotopic composition of siderite associated with major BIFs suggest that the pre–1.8 Ga atmosphere was CO 2 -rich (pCO 2 >100 PAL) and CH 4 -poor (pCH 4 ≈ 10 ppm); therefore, CO 2 , rather than CH 4 , was the major greenhouse gas throughout geologic history. After a decline of hydrothermal fluid flux, BIF-hosting basins generally became euxinic (H 2 S-rich) because of the increased activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) and SO 4 2− -rich seawater, and thereby accumulated organic carbon-rich and pyrite-rich black shales (sulfide-type BIFs). The SO 4 2− contents and SRB activity in the oceans have been essentially the same since ca. 3.8 Ga. The Archean oceans were most likely poor in both Fe 2+ and silica, much like modern oceans. Our study also suggests that diverse communities of organisms, including cyanobacteria, SRB, methanogens, methanotrophs, and eukaryotes, evolved very early in Earth's history, probably by the time the oldest BIFs (ca. 3.8 Ga) formed. BIFs have been found in rocks of all geologic age. Therefore, they cannot be indicators of an anoxic atmosphere and/or anoxic oceans as suggested by many previous researchers. Instead, BIFs indicate that the atmosphere and ocean chemistry have been regulated at present compositions (except pCO 2 ) through geologic history by interactions with the biosphere. The general trend of declining size and abundance of BIFs with geologic time reflects the cooling history of Earth's interior.