Fliegel, Daniel et al. (2012): Characterization of alteration textures in Cretaceous oceanic crust (pillow lava) from the N-Atlantic (DSDP Hole 418A) by spatially-resolved spectroscopy

Leg/Site/Hole:
DSDP 51
DSDP 52
DSDP 53
DSDP 52 418
DSDP 53 418
Identifier:
2013-001301
georefid

10.1016/j.gca.2012.08.026
doi

Creator:
Fliegel, Daniel
University of Bergen, Department of Earth Science, Bergen, Norway
author

Knowles, Emily
University of Alberta, Canada
author

Wirth, Richard
University of Colorado at Boulder, United States
author

Templeton, Alexis
German Research Centre for Geosciences, Germany
author

Staudigel, Hubert
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, United States
author

Muehlenbachs, Karlis
author

Furnes, Harald
author

Identification:
Characterization of alteration textures in Cretaceous oceanic crust (pillow lava) from the N-Atlantic (DSDP Hole 418A) by spatially-resolved spectroscopy
2012
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Elsevier, New York, NY, International
96
80-93
The habit, mineralogy, crystallography, and Fe speciation of tubular and granular alteration textures in basaltic glass recovered from DSDP Hole 418A, which have previously been associated with biologically mediated alteration, were investigated using an integrated suite of microscopic and spectroscopic approaches in order to shine light on their formation and mineralization history. Two different analytical approaches were used: (1) micro scale investigations with conventional petrographic optical microcopy and microscale X-ray fluorescence mapping and X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and (2) nano scale analyses with FIB (focused ion beam milling) to prepare cross-sections for TEM (transmission electron microscopy), EELS (electron energy loss spectroscopy), and STXM (scanning transmission electron microscopy) analyses. The integrated data show that tubular and granular textures are similar in chemical, mineralogical and structural habit. Both granular and tubular alteration textures show a marked transition from ferrous iron in the glass matrix to ferric iron in the textures. Granular and tubular textures are filled with sheet silicates of similar chemistry, and both exhibit thin amorphous alteration rims approximately 10-20 nm wide. The alteration rims are typically depleted in Ca and Fe. Ca is enriched at the contact between the secondary mineralization and the alteration rims, whereas Fe is enriched throughout the alteration features and is mainly present as Fe (super III) in contrast to Fe (super II) in the host glass. Carbon is enriched only in a few areas, and could possibly be of organic origin but is not bound in carbonate. The mineralization of the features follows the sequence: dissolution of the glass; formation of a leached amorphous rim; mineralizing the cavities by smectide type clays and subsequently congruent growing of the texture diameter by diffusing of the elements through the alteration layer. None of the features could be linked solely to a biogenic origin and hence the biogenicity of the textures can neither be refuted nor supported by this micro- and nano-scale data set. Abstract Copyright (2012) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:25.0207
West:-68.0327East: -68.0326
South:25.0205

Igneous and metamorphic petrology; Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments; alteration; Atlantic Ocean; basalts; Bermuda Rise; biogenic processes; characterization; chemical composition; chemical fractionation; clastic sediments; clay; Cretaceous; crust; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP Site 418; igneous rocks; IPOD; iron; lava; Leg 51; Leg 52; Leg 53; Mesozoic; metals; microscope methods; nanoparticles; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; oceanic crust; optical mineralogy; pillow lava; sediments; spectra; TEM data; textures; volcanic rocks; X-ray fluorescence spectra; X-ray spectra; XANES spectra;

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