The Escanaba Trough, Southern Gorda Ridge: Sulfide Deposits And Hydrothermal Processes At A Sediment-Covered Spreading Axis Within The U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 72 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
Since 1985, numerous constructional sulfide-sulfate deposits in the form of mounds, pinnacles, chimneys, and sheets have been located between 40°45' and 41°05'N latitude in Escanaba Trough, the sediment-covered axial valley of the Southern Gorda Ridge. Single-channel seismic data indicate that three volcanic edifices up to 6 km in width penetrate as much as 500 m of turbidites that fill the valley; pillow and sheet flow lavas are exposed on the sea floor where these volcanoes breach the sediment surface. Observations from deeply towed camera systems and submersibles show that the largest hydrothermal deposits occur along the step-faulted northern flank of the central volcanic edifice and on the peripheries of steep-sided, sediment-capped hills, approximately 1 km wide and 100 m high, that rise above the valley floor. The sulfide deposits are highly oxidized, eroded, and partly buried by unconsolidated sediment; aprons of sulfide talus extend downslope from the mounds. Two types of sulfide have been sampled by dredging and submersible. The predominant mound and chimney material is pyrrhotite-rich massive sulfide with low amounts of Zn, Pb, Cd, and Ag. Coarse-grained zones with high porosity mark the location of myriad fluid channelways. Thin crusts of barite associated with pyrrhotite-rich sulfide have Au contents up to 2 ppm. Zoned fragments of polymetallic (Fe-Zn-Pb-Cu-As-Ag-Sb) sulfide dredged from a single site near 41°01'N latitude are part of a chimneylike vent structure with a
Citation
APA:
(1988) The Escanaba Trough, Southern Gorda Ridge: Sulfide Deposits And Hydrothermal Processes At A Sediment-Covered Spreading Axis Within The U.S. Exclusive Economic ZoneMLA: The Escanaba Trough, Southern Gorda Ridge: Sulfide Deposits And Hydrothermal Processes At A Sediment-Covered Spreading Axis Within The U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone. International Marine Minerals Society, 1988.