EPISODIC FRACTURE-CONTROLLED HYDROTHERMAL FLUID FLOW DURING THE EMBRYONIC OPENING OF THE ATLANTIC OCEAN: EVIDENCE FROM A SILICIFIED FAULT ZONE IN THE NEW ENGLAND APPALACHIANS
There are 4 textural types of quartz veins: massive, free growth, crackseal veins that have repeatedly fractured and resealed along their length, and veins with cryptocrystalline quartz. A hypersilicified breccia characterized by clasts of broken quartz euhedra cemented by hydrothermal quartz locally occurs in the core zone. These breccias are interpreted to have to have resulted by hydrofracture.
Fluid flow was driven by a combination density-driven convection and fault-valving. Stable isotope data suggest that the fluid was of meteoric origin. The enormous volumes of quartz in the core cannot be accounted for by the adjacent metasomatic aureole where feldspars were converted to illite. Fracture-channelized fluid probably flowed upward from depth into new fractures. Quartz was precipitated from fluids ranging from 282oC to 208oC, cooling through time. A P estimate of 60 MPa for crystallization of an early quartz vein was obtained using a fluid inclusion technique.
Hydrothermal muscovite intergrown with main-stage quartz yielded a mean 40Ar/39Ar age of 234 Ma (20 Ma younger than host metamorphic muscovite). Thus fluid movement was associated with Newark tectonics.
Quartz veins in this relatively well-exposed fault zone document distributed fluid flow within a developing rift zone associated with the opening of the Atlantic Ocean. These observations provide insights into the mechanism of fluid flow along deep portions of continental rifts that are presently inaccessible along modern analogs.