The Manus Basin hosts a broad range of vent fluid compositions typical for arc and back-arc settings, ranging from black smoker to acid-sulfate styles of fluid venting, as well as novel intermediate temperature and composition "hybrid" smokers. We investigated B, Li, Mg, and Sr concentrations and isotopic compositions of these different fluid types as well as of fresh and altered rocks from the same study area to understand what controls their compositional variability. In particular, the formation of acid-sulfate and hybrid smoker fluids is still poorly understood, and their high Mg concentrations are explained either by dissolution of Mg-bearing minerals in the basement or by mixing between unmodified seawater and magmatic fluids. Mg isotope ratios of the acid-sulfate fluids from the Manus Basin are seawater-like, which supports the idea that acid-sulfate fluids in this study area predominantly form by mixing between unmodified seawater and a Mg-free magmatic fluid. Changes in the B, Li, and Sr isotope ratios relative to seawater indicate water-rock interaction in all acid-sulfate fluids. Further, the combination of δ 7 Li with B concentrations of the same fluids links changes in δ 7 Li to changes in (1) basement alteration, (2) water-to-rock ratios during water-rock interaction, and/or (3) the reaction temperature. These isotope systems, thus, allow tracing of basement composition and acid-sulfate-driven alteration of the back-arc crust and help increase our understanding of hydrothermal fluid-rock interactions and the behavior of fluid-mobile elements.
Back-arc spreading centres and related volcanic structures are known for their intense hydrothermal activity. The axial volcanic edifice of Maka at the North Eastern Lau Spreading Centre is such an example, where fluids of distinct composition are emitted at the Maka hydrothermal field (HF) and at Maka South in 1,525–1,543 m water depth. At Maka HF black smoker-type fluids are actively discharged at temperatures of 329°C and are characterized by low pH values (2.79–3.03) and a depletion in Mg (5.5 mmol/kg) and SO4 (0.5 mmol/L) relative to seawater. High metal (e.g., Fe up to ∼6 mmol/kg) and rare Earth element (REE) contents in the fluids, are indicative for a rock-buffered hydrothermal system at low water/rock ratios (2–3). At Maka South, venting of white smoke with temperatures up to 301°C occurs at chimneys and flanges. Measured pH values range from 4.53 to 5.42 and Mg (31.0 mmol/kg), SO4 (8.2 mmol/L), Cl (309 mmol/kg), Br (0.50 mmol/kg) and Na (230 mmol/kg) are depleted compared to seawater, whereas metals like Li and Mn are typically enriched together with H2S. We propose a three-component mixing model with respect to the fluid composition at Maka South including seawater, a boiling-induced low-Cl vapour and a black smoker-type fluid similar to that of Maka HF, which is also preserved by the trace element signature of hydrothermal pyrite. At Maka South, high As/Co (>10–100) and Sb/Pb (>0.1) in pyrite are suggested to be related to a boiling-induced element fractionation between vapour (As, Sb) and liquid (Co, Pb). By contrast, lower As/Co (<100) and a tendency to higher Co/Ni values in pyrite from Maka HF likely reflect the black smoker-type fluid. The Se/Ge ratio in pyrite provides evidence for fluid-seawater mixing, where lower values (<10) are the result of a seawater contribution at the seafloor or during fluid upflow. Sulphur and Pb isotopes in hydrothermal sulphides indicate a common metal (loid) source at the two vent sites by host rock leaching in the reaction zone, as also reflected by the REE patterns in the vent fluids.
Chlorine, lithium, and boron are trace elements in rhyolite but are enriched in groundwater flowing through rhyolite because they tend to partition into the fluid phase during high‐temperature fluid‐rock reactions. We present a large data set of major element and δ37Cl, δ7Li, and δ11B compositions of thermal water and rhyolite from Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field (YPVF). The Cl/B, Cl/Li, δ37Cl (−0.2‰ to +0.7‰), and δ11B (−6.2‰ to −5.9‰) values of alkaline‐chloride thermal waters reflect high‐temperature leaching of chlorine, lithium, and boron from rhyolite that has δ37Cl and δ11B values of +0.1‰ to +0.9‰ and −6.3‰ to −6.2‰, respectively. Chlorine and boron are not reactive, but lithium incorporation into hydrothermal alteration minerals results in a large range of Cl/Li, B/Li, and δ7Li (−1.2‰ to +3.8‰) values in thermal waters. The relatively large range in δ7Li values of thermal waters reflects a large range of values in rhyolite. Large volumes of rhyolite must be leached to account for the chloride, lithium and boron fluxes, implying deep groundwater flow through rhyolite flows and tuffs representing Yellowstone's three eruptive cycles (∼2.1 Ma). Lower Cl/B values in acid‐sulfate waters result from preferential partitioning of boron into the vapor phase and enrichment in the near‐surface water condensate. The Cl/B, Cl/Li, δ7Li (−0.3‰ to +2.1‰), and δ11B (−8.0‰ to −8.1‰) values of travertine depositing calcium‐carbonate thermal waters which discharge in the northern and southern YPVF suggest that chlorine, lithium, and boron are derived from Mesozoic siliciclastic sediments which contain detrital material from the underlying metamorphic basement.
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