Cool, alkaline serpentinite formation fluid regime with scarce microbial habitability and possible abiotic synthesis beneath the South Chamorro Seamount
Cool, alkaline serpentinite formation fluid regime with scarce microbial habitability and possible abiotic synthesis beneath the South Chamorro Seamount
Date
2018-11-14
Authors
Kawagucci, Shinsuke
Miyazaki, Junichi
Morono, Yuki
Seewald, Jeffrey S.
Wheat, C. Geoffrey
Takai, Ken
Miyazaki, Junichi
Morono, Yuki
Seewald, Jeffrey S.
Wheat, C. Geoffrey
Takai, Ken
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DOI
10.1186/s40645-018-0232-3
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Keywords
Forearc serpentinite mud volcano
South Chamorro Seamount
Limit of biosphere
Present-days’ chemical evolution
Radio-isotope-tracer carbon assimilation estimation
South Chamorro Seamount
Limit of biosphere
Present-days’ chemical evolution
Radio-isotope-tracer carbon assimilation estimation
Abstract
South Chamorro Seamount (SCS) is a blueschist-bearing serpentinite mud volcano in the Mariana forearc. Previous scientific drilling conducted at SCS revealed highly alkaline, sulfate-rich formation fluids resulting from slab-derived fluid upwelling combined with serpentinization both beneath and within the seamount. In the present study, a time-series of ROV dives spanning 1000 days was conducted to collect discharging alkaline fluids from the cased Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Hole 1200C (hereafter the CORK fluid). The CORK fluids were analyzed for chemical compositions (including dissolved gas) and microbial community composition/function. Compared to the ODP porewater, the CORK fluids were generally identical in concentration of major ions, with the exception of significant sulfate depletion and enrichment in sulfide, alkalinity, and methane. Microbiological analyses of the CORK fluids revealed little biomass and functional activity, despite habitable temperature conditions. The post-drilling sulfate depletion is likely attributable to sulfate reduction coupled with oxidation of methane (and hydrogen), probably triggered by the drilling and casing operations. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that abiotic organic synthesis associated with serpentinization is the most plausible source of the abundant methane in the CORK fluid. The SCS formation fluid regime presented here may represent the first example on Earth where abiotic syntheses are conspicuous with little biotic processes, despite a condition with sufficient bioavailable energy potentials and temperatures within the habitable range.
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© The Author(s), 2018. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Progress in Earth and Planetary Science 5 (2018): 74, doi:10.1186/s40645-018-0232-3.
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Progress in Earth and Planetary Science 5 (2018): 74