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Oxygen Isotope Studies of Fresh and Weathered Submarine Basalts
285
Citations
48
References
1972
Year
Marine GeologyVolcanologyEngineeringMagmatismChemical CompositionOxygen Isotope StudiesIsotope GeochemistryMarine ChemistryGeologyTio 2δ 18GeochemistryOxygen IsotopeHigh Temperature GeochemistryEarth Science
The 18 O/ 16 O ratios of fresh unmetamorphosed basalts from the Reykjanes, Mid-Atlantic, and Gorda Ridges and the East Pacific Rise fall in a narrow range of 5.5–5.9‰ (SMOW), identical to those of basalts from oceanic islands. Large plagioclase xenocrysts in some of the basalts are not in isotopic equilibrium with coexisting olivine. The basalts react with sea water at the ambient sea-floor temperature to form clays, resulting in an increase in δ 18 O of the basalt of 0.25‰ per m.y. This provides a very sensitive method to detect early stages of weathering, which otherwise might go unnoticed. Advanced submarine weathering of basalt can remove nearly one half of its SiO 2 , MgO, CaO, and Na 2 O and lesser amounts of Al 2 O s and TiO 2 . Weathering does not proceed deeply enough into the basaltic sea floor to affect the chemical composition of sea water. Since it is likely that large amounts of basaltic debris (less than a few cm in radius) are on the ocean floor, their weathering can affect the ocean-sediment budget of TiO 2 , Al 2 O 3 , SiO 2 , MgO, and CaO.
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