Abstract

AbstractThe Lost City hydrothermal field (LCHF) is hosted in serpentinite at the crest of the Atlantis Massif, an oceanic core complex close to the mid‐Atlantic Ridge. It is remarkable for its longevity and for venting low‐temperature (40–91°C) alkaline fluids rich in hydrogen and methane. IODP Hole U1309D, 5 km north of the LCHF, penetrated 1415 m of gabbroic rocks and contains a near‐conductive thermal gradient close to 100°C km−1. This is remarkable so close to an active hydrothermal field. We present hydrothermal modelling using a topographic profile through the vent field and IODP site U1309. Long‐lived circulation with vent temperatures similar to the LCHF can be sustained at moderate permeabilities of 10−14 to 10−15 m2 with a basal heatflow of 0.22 W m−2. Seafloor topography is an important control, with vents tending to form and remain in higher topography. Models with a uniform permeability throughout the Massif cannot simultaneously maintain circulation at the LCHF and the near‐conductive gradient in the borehole, where permeabilities <10−16 m2 are required. A steeply dipping permeability discontinuity between the LCHF and the drill hole is required to stabilize venting at the summit of the massif by creating a lateral conductive boundary layer. The discontinuity needs to be close to the vent site, supporting previous inferences that high permeability is most likely produced by faulting related to the transform fault. Rapid increases in modelled fluid temperatures with depth beneath the vent agree with previous estimates of reaction temperature based on geochemical modelling.

Highlights

  • The Lost City hydrothermal field (LCHF) was discovered in the year 2000 (Kelley et al 2001)

  • We show that topography and permeability structure are the main controls on vent location, and can place limits on the bulk permeability of both gabbro beneath IODP Site U1309, and fractured serpentinite beneath the LCHF

  • We aim to investigate the influence of topography and permeability structure on the location and stability of the vent field, and on vent temperatures, while maintaining observed temperature conditions in IODP Hole 1309D

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Summary

Introduction

The Lost City hydrothermal field (LCHF) was discovered in the year 2000 (Kelley et al 2001) It is located near the highest point of the Atlantis Massif (Fig. 1), an inside corner high north of the Atlantis transform fault. The Massif is capped by a 100m-thick shear zone consisting of foliated serpentinite and talc–tremolite–chlorite schist overlain by a carbonatecemented breccia. This shear zone is interpreted as a convex-upward detachment fault which exhumed gabbro and peridotite onto the seafloor, with deformation predominantly in the greenschist facies (Boschi et al 2006; McCaig et al 2010)

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