ocean crust
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Author(s):  
Molly A. Crotteau ◽  
Rebecca N. Greenberger ◽  
Bethany L. Ehlmann ◽  
George R. Rossman ◽  
Michelle Harris ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 229160
Author(s):  
Bénédicte Abily ◽  
Georges Ceuleneer ◽  
Mathieu Rospabé ◽  
Mary-Alix Kaczmarek ◽  
Marie Python ◽  
...  

Nature ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 597 (7877) ◽  
pp. 511-515
Author(s):  
Sarah M. Maher ◽  
Jeffrey S. Gee ◽  
Michael J. Cheadle ◽  
Barbara E. John

Author(s):  
Rebecca N. Greenberger ◽  
Michelle Harris ◽  
Bethany L. Ehlmann ◽  
Molly Crotteau ◽  
Peter B. Kelemen ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Agrinier ◽  
Magali Bonifacie ◽  
Gerard Bardoux ◽  
Thomas Giunta ◽  
Francis Lucazeau ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane Barling ◽  
Elin Rydeblad ◽  
Abigail Barker ◽  
Ben Ellis ◽  
Haochen Duan ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Wei-Qi Zhang ◽  
Chuan-Zhou Liu ◽  
Henry J B Dick

Abstract The architecture of lower oceanic crust at slow- and ultraslow-spreading ridge is diverse, yet the mechanisms that produce this diversity are not well understood. Particularly, the 660-km2 gabbroic massif at Atlantis Bank (Southwest Indian Ridge) exhibits significant compositional zonation, representing a high magma supply end member for accretion of the lower ocean crust at slow and ultraslow-spreading ridges. We present the petrographic and geochemical data of olivine gabbros from the 809-metre IODP Hole U1473A at Atlantis Bank gabbroic massif. Structurally, the upper portion of U1473A consists of a ∼600-metre shear zone; below this, the hole is relatively undeformed, with several minor shear zones. Olivine gabbros away from the shear zones have mineral trace element compositions indicative of high-temperature reaction with an oxide-undersaturated melt. By contrast, olivine gabbros within shear zones display petrographic and chemical features indicative of reaction with a relatively low-temperature, oxide-saturated melt. These features indicate an early stage of primitive to moderately evolved melt migration, followed by deformation-driven transport of highly evolved Fe–Ti-rich melts to high levels in this gabbroic massif. The close relationship between shear zones and the reaction with oxide-saturated melts suggests that syn-magmatic shear zones provide a conduit for late-stage, Fe–Ti-rich melt transport through Atlantis Bank lower crust. This process is critical to generate the compositional zonation observed. Thus, the degree of syn-magmatic deformation, which is fundamentally related to magma supply, plays a dominant role in developing the diversity of lower ocean crust observed at slow- and ultraslow-spreading ridges.


Eos ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberly Cartier

Efforts to recover the missing airplane produced high-resolution bathymetry of the southern Indian Ocean that raises new ideas about how ocean crust forms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (24) ◽  
pp. 13283-13293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stacey L. Worman ◽  
Lincoln F. Pratson ◽  
Jeffrey A. Karson ◽  
William H. Schlesinger

Free hydrogen (H2) is a basal energy source underlying chemosynthetic activity within igneous ocean crust. In an attempt to systematically account for all H2within young oceanic lithosphere (<10 Ma) near the Mid-Ocean Ridge (MOR), we construct a box model of this environment. Within this control volume, we assess abiotic H2sources (∼6 × 1012mol H2/y) and sinks (∼4 × 1012mol H2/y) and then attribute the net difference (∼2 × 1012mol H2/y) to microbial consumption in order to balance the H2budget. Despite poorly constrained details and large uncertainties, our analytical framework allows us to synthesize a vast body of pertinent but currently disparate information in order to propose an initial global estimate for microbial H2consumption within young ocean crust that is tractable and can be iteratively improved upon as new data and studies become available. Our preliminary investigation suggests that microbes beneath the MOR may be consuming a sizeable portion (at least ∼30%) of all produced H2, supporting the widely held notion that subseafloor microbes voraciously consume H2and play a fundamental role in the geochemistry of Earth’s ocean–atmosphere system.


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