GC53I-04
Nanoparticulate, sub-micron and micron sized particles emanating from hydrothermal vents 

Friday, 18 December 2015: 14:25
3003 (Moscone West)
George W Luther III, University of Delaware, Lewes, DE, United States, Amy Gartman, USGS, Santa Cruz, CA, United States, Alyssa Findlay, University of Delaware, Oceanography, Newark, DE, United States, Mustafa Yucel, Middle East Technical University, Mersin, Turkey and Clara Sze-Yue Chan, Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst, Newark, DE, United States
Abstract:
Recent data from Geotraces cruises over the MAR and SEPR indicate dissolved and particulate Fe enrichment in waters 1000 and 4000 km from their vent sources, respectively. Deep-sea hydrothermal vents and the waters in the reactive mixing zone above vent orifices have been suggested to be an important source of fine material that can pass through normal filters (0.2 and 0.4 μm). In this work, nanoparticles are defined operationally as that which can pass through a 0.2 μm filter. We investigated two vent sites (Lau Basin and the MAR). Chimneys from both vent sites have fluids that can be sulfide rich or metal rich. We also present chemical and physical chemical data (SEM-EDS, TEM, XRD, EELS) showing some of the materials found in these (nano)particulate phases including pyrite, metal sulfides, silicate and aluminosilicate material. Enrichment of Mg and K in the latter suggest that reverse weathering may occur in the waters within 1-2 meters of the vent orifice where vent waters mix with cold oxygenated bottom waters.