Mineralisation Associated with Submarine Volcanoes of the Southern Kermadec Arc, New Zealand

International Marine Minerals Society
Cornel E. J. de Ronde Ian J. Graham
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
12
File Size:
1794 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 24, 2006

Abstract

New Zealand lies astride a convergent plate boundary that extends north-eastwards from the Taupo Volcanic Zone (TVZ) to Tonga. This boundary is marked by the Kermadec arc, c. 1200 km of which falls within New Zealand’s EEZ, and which is host to numerous volcanic edifices both on the arc and in a zone immediately behind the arc to the west. In 1999, thirteen volcanic centres in the southern 260 km of the arc were surveyed for their hydrothermal plumes with seven of them discharging vent fluids into the surrounding ocean. Three of the seven volcanic centres have had mineralised rocks recovered from them during dredging and submersible operations, namely Brothers, Rumble II West and Clark. Presentday plume data combined with mineralogical evidence indicate that the vent sites at Rumble II West and Clark are waning, although the presence of Cu-rich sulphides in samples recovered from Rumble II West suggest there may be a massive sulphide (Cu-Zn-Pb-Ba ± Au) deposit located within the caldera. Brothers volcanic centre is host to the largest polymetallic mineral deposit discovered along the Kermadec arc and has numerous, up to 7 m tall chimneys within a c. 600 x 200 m area located on its NW caldera wall. Geochemical data indicate that concentrations of base metals are variable and depend critically on sample type. When combined with mineralogical and plume data, this indicates addition of a magmatic fluid component to the vent fluids.
Citation

APA: Cornel E. J. de Ronde Ian J. Graham  (2006)  Mineralisation Associated with Submarine Volcanoes of the Southern Kermadec Arc, New Zealand

MLA: Cornel E. J. de Ronde Ian J. Graham Mineralisation Associated with Submarine Volcanoes of the Southern Kermadec Arc, New Zealand. International Marine Minerals Society, 2006.

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