Hydrothermal activity and first characterization of hydrothermal mineralization and fluids from the Southern New Hebrides Arc (Vanuatu, SW Pacific)

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 5459 KB
- Publication Date:
- Sep 1, 2014
Abstract
"The Vanuatu island arc and its adjacent back-arc basins form part of the southern New Hebrides subduction system in the southwestern Pacific Ocean within a triangle defined by the Solomon Islands, New Caledonia and Fiji (Meffre & Crawford 2001). The back-arc region east of the volcanic front is characterized by three structural depressions namely Vate, Erromango, and Futuna (from N to S), also known as the Coriolis Troughs. Earlier studies of lava compositions reveal the occurrence of highly evolved alkali-rich dacites as well as ankaramite basalts within the individual troughs (McConachy et al. 2005).Here we present the first mineralogical and geochemical analyses of hydrothermal fluids and precipitates (sulfides, sulfates, Fe-oxyhydroxides), sediments, and volcanic rocks, sampled during the "Coriolis Volcanism and Vents" (COVOLVE) cruise SO229 in July 2013 aboard the German R/V Sonne. The samples were retrieved during several ROV Kiel 6000 dives directly from the newly discovered active vent sites at the neovolcanic Nifonea Ridge, and from multiple sites at water depths ranging between 200 to 2800 m within the Vate and Futuna Troughs as well as from the shallow water Epi Caldera NNE of the Coriolis Troughs (Fig. 1)."
Citation
APA:
(2014) Hydrothermal activity and first characterization of hydrothermal mineralization and fluids from the Southern New Hebrides Arc (Vanuatu, SW Pacific)MLA: Hydrothermal activity and first characterization of hydrothermal mineralization and fluids from the Southern New Hebrides Arc (Vanuatu, SW Pacific). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2014.