Mineralization Processes At Ocean Ridges

International Marine Minerals Society
Johnson R. Cann
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
2
File Size:
108 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1988

Abstract

Ocean floor sulfide deposits are now known from many parts of the world mid-ocean ridge system and from some seamounts. Clearly they can be expected to occur commonly on the ocean floor. However, only two or three of the known deposits appear to approach the million-ton size, and in none of the deposits has the grade been well-defined. Can knowledge of the processes that happen within the hydrothermal plumbing below deposits help define the conditions under which large, high-grade deposits form? Here I review present knowledge of ocean-floor hydrothermal processes to attempt a first answer to this question. There are three sources of information about these processes. The solutions emerging from active systems must be compatible with patterns of alteration that underlie the volcanogenic sulfide deposits of ophiolite complexes, which are slices of ocean crust thrust onto land. Both of these types of evidence can be linked by computer modelling of the exchange of heat and metals between rocks and flowing water.
Citation

APA: Johnson R. Cann  (1988)  Mineralization Processes At Ocean Ridges

MLA: Johnson R. Cann Mineralization Processes At Ocean Ridges. International Marine Minerals Society, 1988.

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