Abstract

AbstractHydrothermal venting at the Lucky Strike hydrothermal field, located on the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge, is associated with faulting linked to the tectonic dismemberment of a central axial volcano. Radium‐226/Ba dating of hydrothermal barite indicates that hydrothermal venting is at least 6,600 years old, and that Lucky Strike is one of the youngest known vent fields on the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge, which typically have ages exceeding 20 ka. Deposit volume calculations indicate that the total accumulated mass of the hydrothermal deposits on the seafloor at Lucky Strike is ∼1.3 ± 0.2 Mt, and that this mass accumulated at a maximum average rate of 194 ± 28 t/yr. This accumulation rate is comparable to other well characterized mid‐ocean ridge hydrothermal sites, such as TAG and Endeavor, but at Lucky Strike is concentrated within a relatively small area of <2.5 km2.

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