Abstract
The peak-ring of the 66 Ma, ~180 km Chicxulub impact structure in the northern Yucatán peninsula and southern Gulf of Mexico was sampled during the International Ocean Discovery Program and International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (IODP–ICDP) Expedition 364 at Site M0077 (21.45° N, 89.95° W). Secondary clay minerals are pervasive throughout the upper peak-ring lithologies as a product of ubiquitous altered glass present throughout the impact melt and melt-bearing breccia sequence. Here we present the first detailed study of the clay mineralogy (microprobe, pXRD, spectral reflectance from 350 to 2500 nm) and isotope geochemistry (δ2H and δ18O) of the <0.2 μm size-fraction from upper peak-ring lithologies. The clay mineralogy is dominated by smectitic clay minerals, whose composition varies with stratigraphic position. Trioctahedral MgFe smectite (var. saponite) is most common in Units or Subunits 2A, 2C, 3 and 4, while a section of Subunit 2B contains a more dioctahedral, Al-rich smectite. Higher porosity regions of the lower to mid, dioctahedral smectite-dominated intervals have higher δ18O (+14.2 to +18.6‰) whereas intervals dominated by trioctahedral smectite have lower δ18O (+10.4 to +14.1‰). The range of smectite δ2H (−105 to −87‰), in comparison to that of oxygen isotopes, is proportionally much less variable and unrelated to smectite mineralogy. When combined, the oxygen and hydrogen isotope compositions of the smectitic clay minerals suggest low temperature (~20 to 50 °C) formation from meteoric water-dominated fluids. The lower end of this temperature range is below current ambient conditions, which conceivably could suggest smectite formation before much of the overlying sedimentary rocks were deposited (~56 Ma?). Calculated temperatures are generally lower than those associated with impact-generated hydrothermal alteration.Calculated δ18O and δ2H of meteoric water-dominated fluids associated with low-temperature formation of these clay minerals are lower than known for modern meteoric water in the Yucatán region. The simplest explanation for the source of these ancient fluids is meteoric water-dominated Gulf Coast brines. A more remote possibility is orogenically-driven, long-distance transport of groundwater from highlands to the east via an artesian aquifer formed in part by fractured Mesozoic rocks extending laterally beneath the impact structure.
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