New Data From The Escanaba Trough: Implications For Other Sediment-Covered Ridge Axes And Besshi-Type Sulfides On Land

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 78 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1989
Abstract
Recent investigations located at least six major massive sulfide deposits (dimensions measured in tens to hundreds of meters) within a 50-km-long segment of Escanaba Trough, the sediment-covered axial valley of southern Gorda Ridge. The sediment fill is intercalated silt and sand turbidites and hemipelagic mud with a maximum thickness of 500 m. Several volcanic edifices, spaced at approximately 15-km intervals along the ridge axis, penetrate and locally breach the sediment. The largest sulfide deposits form mounds and ridges on the steep flanks of structurally unstable sediment-capped blocks that have been uplifted above the volcanic edifices; both sediment and sulfide deposits are undergoing rapid erosion and redeposition. Although hydrothermal activity appears to be absent at most sulfide fields, 220°C fluids are discharging from the tops of sulfide mounds near 41°00'N lat, 127°31'W long. Recent pillow lavas and sheetflows erupted onto the sediment-covered sea floor less than 500 m away from the active vent field. The massive sulfide deposits have compositional characteristics that differ from deposits formed on sediment-free spreading axes. The Escanaba Trough deposits include Fe- and Cu-rich, Zn- and Pb-poor massive sulfide mounds, polymetal (Zn-Fe-Pb-Cu-As-Ag-Sb-Sn) sulfide vent structures, abundant barite-rich chimneys, crusts, and sinter cones, and thermogenic petroleum in the sulfide and sediment. Sulfate-rich crusts have high Au values ranging between 2 and 10 ppm. The unusual mineral assemblage at Escanaba Trough
Citation
APA:
(1989) New Data From The Escanaba Trough: Implications For Other Sediment-Covered Ridge Axes And Besshi-Type Sulfides On LandMLA: New Data From The Escanaba Trough: Implications For Other Sediment-Covered Ridge Axes And Besshi-Type Sulfides On Land. International Marine Minerals Society, 1989.