Abstract

Hyperalkaline waters display unusually high productivity, which makes them prime targets in the search for life elsewhere in the solar system. However, the formation mechanisms of alkaline waters are not well understood, because the response of biogeochemical proxies to these conditions is poorly constrained. To address this issue, we assessed the influence of hydrothermal fluids on the salinity and pH of alkaline lakes based on a case study of an early Permian paleo-alkaline lake (~290 Ma; Fengcheng Formation) in the Mahu Sag, northwestern Junggar Basin, China. Multiple proxies indicate that hydrothermal fluids in the central salt rock and marginal tuff–mudstone areas of the Fengcheng Formation were affected by deep and shallow hydrothermal fluids, respectively. A small part of the transitional area was affected by hydrothermal fluids with a hybrid nature. The hydrothermal fluid activity gradually weakened up-section in all areas while salinity (inferred from carbon and oxygen isotopes) increased and pH (inferred from nitrogen isotopes and mineralogy) decreased from hyperalkaline (>9.25) to moderately alkaline conditions. These trends suggest that hyperalkalinity was largely driven by hydrothermal processes. In contrast, evaporation, which dominated towards the end of the lake's lifetime, maintained an elevated pH but did evidently not have a similarly strong effect as hydrothermal fluids. Our data suggest that hydrothermal activity and evaporation in closed lacustrine basins have the potential to create extreme conditions for the formation of alkaline lakes. The evolution of salinity and pH may not necessarily be synchronized.

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