Discharge of hydrothermal fluids through sediment at the Escanaba Trough, Gorda Ridge (ODP Leg 169): assessing the effects on the rock magnetic signal
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Publication date
2000-01-18
Authors
Urbat, Michael
Dekkers, M.J.
Krumsiek, Klaus
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Article
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Abstract
An integrated rock-magnetic and multivariate statistical analysis of a suite of sediment samples recovered from ODP
Sites 1037 and 1038 (Leg 169, Escanaba Trough, Gorda Ridge spreading center, NE Pacific Ocean) has been carried out
to assess the use of the sediment magnetic signal as a tracer of post-depositional alteration related to the discharge of
hydrothermal fluids through these sediments. The uppermost (above 40 mbsf) section of three separate holes (Holes
1037 B, 1038 I and 1038 G) was sampled; previous sedimentological and geochemical studies indicated that these holes
represent a transect from unaltered to strongly hydrothermally influenced sediments. Analysis of NRM, ARM,
anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS), hysteresis parameters and low-temperature magnetic properties suggest
increasing alteration of the magnetic minerals with increasing circulation of hydrothermal circulation of fluids. Fuzzy
c-means clustering combined with non-linear mapping yields a more elaborate picture because similar alteration
groupings at different holes can be compared. At Hole 1037 B, a sedimentary reference site drilled away from the area
of high heat flow, the rock-magnetic signal is a sensitive record of changes in detrital inputs. Magnetite and some
monoclinic pyrrhotite are detected. The detrital magnetic signal is still apparent at intermediate Hole 1038 I, but cluster
analysis detects an increasing hydrothermal influence on the magnetomineralogy in the lower part of the hole. Strong
hydrothermal alteration at Hole 1038 G results in a complete loss of the detrital/diagenetic magnetic signal, which is
replaced by a much weaker `hydrothermal' signal composed of monoclinic pyrrhotite and pyrite. The alteration of the
magnetic signal is not restricted to the uppermost few meters of the sediment column and the magnetic properties of the
sediment can be used to trace even minor alterations of marine sediments related to the lateral and vertical advection of
hydrothermal fluids which may easily be overlooked by more traditional methods.
Keywords
remanent magnetization, multivariate analysis, Escanaba Trough, hydrothermal conditions, ODP Site 1037, ODP Site 1038