Low-temperature alteration of the upper oceanic crust and the alkalinity budget of seawater

1994 ◽  
Vol 115 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 239-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur J. Spivack ◽  
Hubert Staudigel
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Netta Shalev ◽  
Tomaso R. R. Bontognali ◽  
C. Geoffrey Wheat ◽  
Derek Vance

AbstractThe oceanic magnesium budget is important to our understanding of Earth’s carbon cycle, because similar processes control both (e.g., weathering, volcanism, and carbonate precipitation). However, dolomite sedimentation and low-temperature hydrothermal circulation remain enigmatic oceanic Mg sinks. In recent years, magnesium isotopes (δ26Mg) have provided new constraints on the Mg cycle, but the lack of data for the low-temperature hydrothermal isotope fractionation has hindered this approach. Here we present new δ26Mg data for low-temperature hydrothermal fluids, demonstrating preferential 26Mg incorporation into the oceanic crust, on average by εsolid-fluid ≈ 1.6‰. These new data, along with the constant seawater δ26Mg over the past ~20 Myr, require a significant dolomitic sink (estimated to be 1.5–2.9 Tmol yr−1; 40–60% of the oceanic Mg outputs). This estimate argues strongly against the conventional view that dolomite formation has been negligible in the Neogene and points to the existence of significant hidden dolomite formation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonja Aulbach

Abstract Despite its accessory mineral status in metabasaltic rocks, rutile controls the whole-rock Ti, Nb and Ta budget. These are key elements used to trace fluid- and melt-mediated mass transfer across the mantle–crust boundary. Rutile also contains significant amounts of the redox-sensitive element V, which is increasingly used to estimate oxygen fugacity. Kimberlite-borne mantle eclogite xenoliths, which are frequently rutile-bearing, have been interpreted as residues from the extraction of silicic partial melt similar in composition to the average continental crust. Published mineral compositions for eclogite xenoliths from various cratons combined with geothermobarometrical calculations show that TiO2 contents in garnet and clinopyroxene increase with increasing temperature of last residence in the lithospheric mantle, whereas apparent clinopyroxene–garnet distribution coefficients decrease. This implies that (1) increasing TiO2 contents in eclogitic garnet or clinopyroxene are not a signature of increasing metasomatism with depth, (2) whole-rock eclogites reconstructed without rutile will increasingly underestimate TiO2, Nb and Ta contents with decreasing temperature, and (3) low-temperature eclogites are more likely to contain free rutile. Only about a third of the ∼250 samples considered here would have whole-rock TiO2 contents (reconstructed with calculated rutile modes) required for rutile saturation during subduction and partial melting. If there is a role for subducting oceanic crust now sampled as mantle eclogite, the characteristic Ti–Nb–Ta depletion in continental crust may require fluid-dominated processes, where these elements are not efficiently mobilised. In garnet, Ti uptake on the octahedral site is accommodated primarily by coupled substitution with Na and subordinately with a divalent metal cation, and there is no evidence for substitution on the tetrahedral site. For samples equilibrated to the conductive geotherm, Ti in addition to Na enrichment may be indicative of equilibration in the diamond stability field. The jadeite component in clinopyroxene as a function of temperature is a good indicator of the geotherm to which the various samples equilibrated, and can be used to reveal samples within each suite that have been affected by isobaric heating. The distribution of V in eclogitic garnet, clinopyroxene and rutile is affected by bulk composition, temperature and oxygen fugacity. In carefully vetted, low-temperature samples with TiO2 contents >0·8 wt%, V-based oxybarometry may monitor redox conditions prevailing during metamorphism of oceanic crust or, at lower TiO2, during (secular) cooling-related exsolution of rutile from garnet or clinopyroxene, whereas in higher-temperature ilmenite-bearing samples metasomatic conditions may be recorded.


2019 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 2252-2273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominik A. Kardell ◽  
Gail L. Christeson ◽  
Justin D. Estep ◽  
Robert S. Reece ◽  
Richard L. Carlson

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alberto Robador ◽  
Sean P. Jungbluth ◽  
Douglas E. LaRowe ◽  
Robert M. Bowers ◽  
Michael S. Rappé ◽  
...  

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