Comparative Investigations On Submarine Hydrothermal Mineralisation In The S.W. Pacific And Eastern Caribbean

International Marine Minerals Society
D. Cronan
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
2
File Size:
101 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2002

Abstract

Both the S.W. Pacific and Caribbean island arcs are host to submarine hydrothermal mineral deposits, the former more so than the latter. In the S.W. Pacific, the whole gamut of such deposits occurs on the sea floor, sulphides, silicates, Fe and Mn oxides, whereas during the limited studies to date in the Caribbean only hydrothermal Mn oxides have been found to occur on the sea floor there in any abundance. Comparisons between the respective Mn oxides are thus the most fruitful at the present limited stage of our knowledge of Caribbean submarine hydrothermalism. Southwest Pacific hydrothermal ferromanganese oxides and their possible relationships to underlying sulphide mineralisation or bedrock anomalies (the geochemical window concept) has been a fruitful field of research in recent years. Certain element enrichments in crusts may be indicative of underlying mineralisation (Rogers et al. 2001). However, more recent studies on buried hydrothermal crusts in the S.W. Pacific (Cronan et al. 2002) have shown there to have been postdepositional diagenetic uptake of elements in them, and thus these elements cannot be used with any confidence in geochemical exploration for buried sulphide deposits unless sediment involvement can be eliminated.
Citation

APA: D. Cronan  (2002)  Comparative Investigations On Submarine Hydrothermal Mineralisation In The S.W. Pacific And Eastern Caribbean

MLA: D. Cronan Comparative Investigations On Submarine Hydrothermal Mineralisation In The S.W. Pacific And Eastern Caribbean. International Marine Minerals Society, 2002.

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