TY - JOUR
T1 - Subseafloor sulphide deposit formed by pumice replacement mineralisation
AU - the D/V Chikyu Expedition 909 Scientists
AU - Nozaki, Tatsuo
AU - Nagase, Toshiro
AU - Takaya, Yutaro
AU - Yamasaki, Toru
AU - Otake, Tsubasa
AU - Yonezu, Kotaro
AU - Ikehata, Kei
AU - Totsuka, Shuhei
AU - Kitada, Kazuya
AU - Sanada, Yoshinori
AU - Yamada, Yasuhiro
AU - Ishibashi, Jun ichiro
AU - Kumagai, Hidenori
AU - Maeda, Lena
AU - Fuchida, Shigeshi
AU - Fukuhara, Tatsuo
AU - Ishibashi, Jun ichiro
AU - Kato, Hirokazu
AU - Kawachi, Masanobu
AU - Kawaguchi, Shinji
AU - Kawakida, Ryuhei
AU - Kitada, Kazuya
AU - Komori, Shogo
AU - Koshikawa, Hiroshi
AU - Kret, Kakda
AU - Kumagai, Hidenori
AU - Maeda, Lena
AU - Masaki, Yuka
AU - Matsui, Yohei
AU - McIntosh, Iona
AU - Minamide, Kana
AU - Miyahara, Rena
AU - Mukae, Nobuhiro
AU - Nagase, Toshiro
AU - Nakamura, Shunsuke
AU - Nozaki, Tatsuo
AU - Ohno, Masao
AU - Otake, Tsubasa
AU - Saitoh, Masafumi
AU - Sanada, Yoshinori
AU - Toki, Tomohiro
AU - Torimoto, Junji
AU - Totsuka, Shuhei
AU - Tsutsumi, Akihi
AU - Uehara, Riki
AU - Uza, Hirotaka
AU - Watanabe, Masayuki
AU - Yamagishi, Takahiro
AU - Yamamoto, Hirofumi
AU - Yamasaki, Toru
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Hideo Yamamoto, Yukari Otsuki and Kiyomi Kumagai of JAMSTEC for supporting powder sample preparation and ICP-QMS analyses at JAMSTEC. We also thank the captain, OSI, OIM, officers, crews, ROV operating teams and MWJ technical staffs of cruise CK16-05 (D/V Chikyu Expedition 909) for their valuable collaborations. Some figures were much improved by Koichiro Fujinaga of ChibaTech and Nobuko Unozawa of JAMSTEC. This work was supported by the Council for Science, Technology and Innovation (CSTI) through its Cross-ministerial Strategic Innovation Promotion Program (SIP) “Next-generation technology for ocean resources exploration”.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Seafloor massive sulphide (SMS) deposits, modern analogues of volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) deposits on land, represent future resources of base and precious metals. Studies of VMS deposits have proposed two emplacement mechanisms for SMS deposits: exhalative deposition on the seafloor and mineral and void space replacement beneath the seafloor. The details of the latter mechanism are poorly characterised in detail, despite its potentially significant role in global metal cycling throughout Earth’s history, because in-situ studies require costly drilling campaigns to sample SMS deposits. Here, we interpret petrographic, geochemical and geophysical data from drill holes in a modern SMS deposit and demonstrate that it formed via subseafloor replacement of pumice. Samples from the sulphide body and overlying sediment at the Hakurei Site, Izena Hole, middle Okinawa Trough indicate that sulphides initially formed as aggregates of framboidal pyrite and matured into colloform and euhedral pyrite, which were replaced by chalcopyrite, sphalerite and galena. The initial framboidal pyrite is closely associated with altered material derived from pumice, and alternating layers of pumiceous and hemipelagic sediments functioned as a factory of sulphide mineralisation. We infer that anhydrite-rich layers within the hemipelagic sediment forced hydrothermal fluids to flow laterally, controlling precipitation of a sulphide body extending hundreds of meters.
AB - Seafloor massive sulphide (SMS) deposits, modern analogues of volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) deposits on land, represent future resources of base and precious metals. Studies of VMS deposits have proposed two emplacement mechanisms for SMS deposits: exhalative deposition on the seafloor and mineral and void space replacement beneath the seafloor. The details of the latter mechanism are poorly characterised in detail, despite its potentially significant role in global metal cycling throughout Earth’s history, because in-situ studies require costly drilling campaigns to sample SMS deposits. Here, we interpret petrographic, geochemical and geophysical data from drill holes in a modern SMS deposit and demonstrate that it formed via subseafloor replacement of pumice. Samples from the sulphide body and overlying sediment at the Hakurei Site, Izena Hole, middle Okinawa Trough indicate that sulphides initially formed as aggregates of framboidal pyrite and matured into colloform and euhedral pyrite, which were replaced by chalcopyrite, sphalerite and galena. The initial framboidal pyrite is closely associated with altered material derived from pumice, and alternating layers of pumiceous and hemipelagic sediments functioned as a factory of sulphide mineralisation. We infer that anhydrite-rich layers within the hemipelagic sediment forced hydrothermal fluids to flow laterally, controlling precipitation of a sulphide body extending hundreds of meters.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41598-021-87050-z
DO - 10.1038/s41598-021-87050-z
M3 - Article
C2 - 33893333
AN - SCOPUS:85104958829
SN - 2045-2322
VL - 11
JO - Scientific Reports
JF - Scientific Reports
IS - 1
M1 - 8809
ER -