Publication | Closed Access
30,000 Years of Hydrothermal Activity at the Lost City Vent Field
405
Citations
11
References
2003
Year
VolcanologyEngineeringIsotope DataHydrothermal ActivityEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceMagmatic-hydrothermal SystemGeophysicsGeochronologyHydrothermal FluidMarine GeologyGeographyGeologyHydrothermal VentRadiocarbon AgesTectonicsGeochemistryPetrologyHydrothermal Geochemistry
Strontium, carbon, and oxygen isotope data and radiocarbon ages document at least 30,000 years of hydrothermal activity driven by serpentinization reactions at Lost City. Serpentinization beneath this off-axis field is estimated to occur at a minimum rate of 1.2 x 10(-4) cubic kilometers per year. The access of seawater to relatively cool, fresh peridotite, coupled with faulting, volumetric expansion, and mass wasting processes, are crucial to sustain such systems. The amount of heat produced by serpentinization of peridotite massifs, typical of slow and ultraslow spreading environments, has the potential to drive Lost City-type systems for hundreds of thousands, possibly millions, of years.
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