Rare earth element abundances in hydrothermal fluids from the Manus Basin, Papua New Guinea : indicators of sub-seafloor hydrothermal processes in back-arc basins
Rare earth element abundances in hydrothermal fluids from the Manus Basin, Papua New Guinea : indicators of sub-seafloor hydrothermal processes in back-arc basins
Date
2010-05-02
Authors
Craddock, Paul R.
Bach, Wolfgang
Seewald, Jeffrey S.
Rouxel, Olivier J.
Reeves, Eoghan P.
Tivey, Margaret K.
Bach, Wolfgang
Seewald, Jeffrey S.
Rouxel, Olivier J.
Reeves, Eoghan P.
Tivey, Margaret K.
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Abstract
Rare earth element (REE) concentrations are reported for a large suite of seafloor vent fluids
from four hydrothermal systems in the Manus back–arc basin (Vienna Woods, PACMANUS,
DESMOS and SuSu Knolls vent areas). Sampled vent fluids show a wide range of absolute REE
concentrations and chondrite–normalized (REEN) distribution patterns (LaN/SmN ~ 0.6 – 11;
LaN/YbN ~ 0.6 – 71; EuN/Eu*N ~ 1 – 55). REEN distribution patterns in different vent fluids range
from light–REE enriched, to mid– and heavy–REE enriched, to flat, and have a range of positive
Eu–anomalies. This heterogeneity contrasts markedly with relatively uniform REEN distribution
patterns of mid–ocean ridge hydrothermal fluids. In Manus Basin fluids, aqueous REE
compositions do not inherit directly or show a clear relationship with the REE compositions of
primary crustal rocks with which hydrothermal fluids interact. These results suggest that the
REEs are less sensitive indicators of primary crustal rock composition despite crustal rocks being
the dominant source of REEs in submarine hydrothermal fluids. In contrast, differences in
aqueous REE compositions are consistently correlated with differences in fluid pH and ligand
(chloride, fluoride and sulfate) concentrations. Our results suggest that the REEs can be used as
an indicator of the type of magmatic acid volatile (i.e., presence of HF, SO2) degassing in
submarine hydrothermal systems. Additional fluid data suggest that near seafloor mixing
between high–temperature hydrothermal fluid and locally entrained seawater at many vent areas
in the Manus Basin causes anhydrite precipitation. Anhydrite effectively incorporates REE and
likely affects measured fluid REE concentrations, but does not affect their relative distributions.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2010. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74 (2010): 5494-5513, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2010.07.003.