Mineralogical and Fluid Inclusion Studies on Seafloor Hydrothermal Vents at TA25 Caldera, Tonga Arc

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.author 최선기 -
dc.contributor.author 박상준 -
dc.contributor.author 최상훈 -
dc.contributor.author 이경용 -
dc.contributor.author 김현섭 -
dc.contributor.author 이인경 -
dc.date.accessioned 2020-07-15T22:33:14Z -
dc.date.available 2020-07-15T22:33:14Z -
dc.date.created 2020-02-11 -
dc.date.issued 2015-12-17 -
dc.identifier.uri https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/24978 -
dc.description.abstract The extensive hydrothermal vent field was discovered at TA25(V18s-HR in the SO-167 cruise) caldera in the Tonga arc, southwest Pacific. The TA25 caldera is a submarine volcano of dacitic composition and hosts the NE- and NW-trending hydrothermal vent on the western caldera wall. These active hydrothermal crusters are mostly small (chimney: <0.5m in tall sulfide mound: <3m in diameter) and immature, and emit the transparent fluids of which temperature range from 150℃ to 242℃ (average = 203℃). The hydrothermal sulfide ores, recovered by ROV and/or TV-grab, are mainly composed of sphalerite, pyrite, marcasite, galena, chalcopyrite, covellite, tennantite, enargite and sulfates such as barite, gypsum/anhydrite. It is observed that three distinct mineralogical zonation from exterior to interior of the chimneys: (1) barite-gypsum/anhydrite-pyrite-sphalerite (2) sphalerite-pyrite-galena±chalcopyrite (3) sphaleirte-pyrite-chalcopyrite-enargite-tennantite±galena±covellite. FeS content in sphalerite increases from chimney exterior to interior. Chalcopyrite is more abundant in the mound than in the chimney, implying fluid temperatures in mound are greater than in the chimney. The enargite assemblage (pyrite-chalcopyrite-enargite-tennantite) is indicative of high-sulfidation epithermal deposits. Fluid inclusions on barite crystals from mound samples show mono-type inclusion (two-phase liquid-rich inclusions) which is othermal vent on the western caldera wall. These active hydrothermal crusters are mostly small (chimney: <0.5m in tall sulfide mound: <3m in diameter) and immature, and emit the transparent fluids of which temperature range from 150℃ to 242℃ (average = 203℃). The hydrothermal sulfide ores, recovered by ROV and/or TV-grab, are mainly composed of sphalerite, pyrite, marcasite, galena, chalcopyrite, covellite, tennantite, enargite and sulfates such as barite, gypsum/anhydrite. It is observed that three distinct mineralogical zonation from exterior to interior of the chimneys: (1) barite-gypsum/anhydrite-pyrite-sphalerite (2) sphalerite-pyrite-galena±chalcopyrite (3) sphaleirte-pyrite-chalcopyrite-enargite-tennantite±galena±covellite. FeS content in sphalerite increases from chimney exterior to interior. Chalcopyrite is more abundant in the mound than in the chimney, implying fluid temperatures in mound are greater than in the chimney. The enargite assemblage (pyrite-chalcopyrite-enargite-tennantite) is indicative of high-sulfidation epithermal deposits. Fluid inclusions on barite crystals from mound samples show mono-type inclusion (two-phase liquid-rich inclusions) which is -
dc.description.uri 1 -
dc.language English -
dc.publisher American -
dc.relation.isPartOf AGU Fall meeting -
dc.title Mineralogical and Fluid Inclusion Studies on Seafloor Hydrothermal Vents at TA25 Caldera, Tonga Arc -
dc.type Conference -
dc.citation.conferencePlace US -
dc.citation.endPage 1 -
dc.citation.startPage 1 -
dc.citation.title AGU Fall meeting -
dc.contributor.alternativeName 최선기 -
dc.contributor.alternativeName 박상준 -
dc.contributor.alternativeName 이경용 -
dc.contributor.alternativeName 김현섭 -
dc.identifier.bibliographicCitation AGU Fall meeting, pp.1 -
dc.description.journalClass 1 -
Appears in Collections:
Marine Resources & Environment Research Division > Ocean Georesources Research Department > 2. Conference Papers
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