Abstract

Seafloor hydrothermal polymetallic sulfide deposits are a new type of resource, with great potential economic value and good prospect development. This paper discusses turbidity, oxidation–reduction potential, and temperature anomalies of hydrothermal plumes from the Zouyu-1 and Zouyu-2 hydrothermal fields on the southern Mid-Atlantic Ridge. We use the known location of these vent fields and plume data collected in multiple years (2009, 2011, 2013) to demonstrate how real-time plume exploration can be used to locate active vent fields, and thus associated sulfide deposits. Turbidity anomalies can be detected 10 s of km from an active source, but the location precision is no better than a few kilometers because fine-grained particles are quasi-conservative over periods of many days. Temperature and oxidation–reduction potential anomalies provide location precision of a few hundred meters. Temperature anomalies are generally weak and difficult to reliably detect, except by chance encounters of a buoyant plume. Oxidation–reduction potential is highly sensitive (nmol concentrations of reduced hydrothermal chemicals) to discharges of all temperatures and responds immediately to a plume encounter. Real-time surveys using continuous tows of turbidity and oxidation–reduction potential sensors offer the most efficient and precise surface ship exploration presently possible.

Highlights

  • We use the known location of these vent fields and plume data collected in multiple years (2009, 2011, 2013) to demonstrate how real-time plume exploration can be used to locate active vent fields, and associated sulfide deposits

  • Most hydrothermal fields are found on mid-ocean ridges (Beaulieu et al 2015)

  • It is estimated that about 85 % of midocean ridge sulfide deposits occur on slow-spreading ridges (Hannington et al 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Most hydrothermal fields are found on mid-ocean ridges (Beaulieu et al 2015). Slow-spreading mid-ocean ridges account for 60 % of the 64,000 km total length of global mid-ocean ridges. This paper discusses turbidity, oxidation–reduction potential, and temperature anomalies of hydrothermal plumes from the Zouyu-1 and Zouyu-2 hydrothermal fields on the southern Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This paper uses recent water column studies in a southern MAR tectonic segment to show how real-time measurements of hydrothermal plume tracers (turbidity, oxidation–reduction potential (ORP), and temperature) can be used to precisely locate active vent sites and, the possibility of nearby sulfide deposits.

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