GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017

Paper No. 254-4
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-6:30 PM

FLUID INCLUSIONS OF VEIN PRECIPITATES HOSTED IN THE TROODOS PILLOW LAVAS: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE POST-MAGMATIC STRUCTURAL EVOLUTION OF SUPRA-SUBDUCTION ZONES


QUANDT, Dennis1, MICHEUZ, Peter1, KURZ, Walter1 and KRENN, Kurt2, (1)Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Graz, Heinrichstrasse 26, Graz, 8010, Austria, (2)Department of Mineralogy & Petrology, Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Graz, Universitätsplatz 2, Graz, 8010, Austria, dennis.quandt@uni-graz.at

The Troodos ophiolite, Cyprus, is one of the best preserved ophiolites and exposes a complete sequence of oceanic lithosphere. Based on geochemical data a supra-subduction zone (SSZ) setting was proposed. Microtextures and fluid inclusions of veins and vesicles within the Pillow Lavas record the post-magmatic structural and geochemical evolution of this SSZ beginning at 75 Ma. Three different vein types from the Upper and Lower Pillow Lavas are distinguished and imply vein precipitation under a dominant extensional regime: (1) syntaxial calcite-, quartz- and zeolite-bearing veins are interpreted as mineralized extension fractures that were pervaded by seawater. This advective fluid flow in an open system changed later into a closed system characterized by geochemical self-organization. (2) Blocky and (3) antitaxial fibrous calcite veins are associated with brecciation due to hydrofracturing and diffusion-crystallization processes, respectively. Based on aqueous fluid inclusion chemistry with seawater salinities in all studied vein types, representative fluid inclusion isochores crossed with calculated litho- and hydrostatic pressure conditions yield mineral precipitation temperatures between 180 and 210 °C, for veins and vesicles hosted in the Upper and Lower Pillow Lavas. This points to a heat source for the circulating seawater and implies that vein and vesicle minerals precipitated shortly after pillow lava crystallization under dominant isobaric cooling conditions. Compared to previous suggestions derived from secondary mineralization a less steep geothermal gradient of 200 °C from the Sheeted Dyke Complex to the Pillow Lavas of the Troodos SSZ is proposed. Further fossil and recent SSZ like the Mirdita ophiolite, Albania, and the Izu-Bonin fore arc, respectively, reveal similar volcanic sequences. Vein samples recovered during International Ocean Discovery Program expedition 351 and 352 in the Izu-Bonin back and fore arc, respectively, indicate also seawater infiltration into fractures but low-temperature (<150 °C) mineral precipitation. This comparison of spatially and temporally unrelated vein systems contributes to the understanding of post-magmatic structural and geochemical processes in SSZ.

This study was granted by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF-P 27982-N29).