Abstract
ABSTRACT Deposition of terrestrial carbonate (i.e. travertine) and silica sinter in geothermal areas is always closely linked to the presence of relevant crustal structures which enhance the permeability in the upper crust favouring the upflow of fluids to the surface. Most travertine deposits are originated by geothermal fluids stored within carbonate reservoirs in continental crust, and their morphology and areal distribution provide useful information on geometry, kinematics, and age of faults which control the fluid flow. In this paper, we focus on the tectonic control on a travertine depositional system, associated with silica sinter, developing in oceanic crust, in the Lýsuskarð volcano-geothermal area on the Snæfellsnes Peninsula, West Iceland. The presence of HCO3 and Ca in the geothermal fluids is related to chemical-physical processes linked to fluid–rock interaction that occurs in the geothermal reservoir made up of tholeiitic basalt, by fluids enriched in CO2 of deep origin (i.e. magmatic). Travertine deposits consist of mounds and slopes, which are still in formation and overlie the silica sinter deposits. Both sinter and travertine deposits derive from thermal springs aligned according to two trends: NNE-SSW and WNW-ESE. This evidence suggests the occurrence of buried, permeable, and thus active faults, which control the circulation of fluids containing HCO3 and Ca. Faults are near parallel to those which define the rift systems and transform zones in Iceland, and probably comprise the still active sector of the abandoned transform zone that, starting with the Snæfellsnes Peninsula, interrupts eastward the northern continuation of the western and eastern rift-zones in the south-central Iceland. In this setting, we refer, for the first time, travertine and silica sinter deposition to an oceanic active crustal structure.
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