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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
    Description: International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 357 successfully cored an east–west transect across the southern wall of Atlantis Massif on the western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) to study the links between serpentinization processes and microbial activity in the shallow subsurface of highly altered ultra- mafic and mafic sequences that have been uplifted to the seafloor along a major detachment fault zone. The primary goals of this ex- pedition were to (1) examine the role of serpentinization in driving hydrothermal systems, sustaining microbial communities, and se- questering carbon; (2) characterize the tectonomagmatic processes that lead to lithospheric heterogeneities and detachment faulting; and (3) assess how abiotic and biotic processes change with varia- tions in rock type and progressive exposure on the seafloor. To ac- complish these objectives, we developed a coring and sampling strategy centered on the use of seabed drills—the first time that such systems have been used in the scientific ocean drilling pro- grams. This technology was chosen in the hope of achieving high recovery of the carbonate cap sequences and intact contact and de- formation relationships. The expedition plans also included several engineering developments to assess geochemical parameters during drilling; sample bottom water before, during, and after drilling; sup- ply synthetic tracers during drilling for contamination assessment; acquire in situ electrical resistivity and magnetic susceptibility mea- surements for assessing fractures, fluid flow, and extent of ser- pentinization; and seal boreholes to provide opportunities for future experiments. (...)
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2014-03-11
    Description: The interaction of single crystals of a zeolite, scolecite (CaAl 2 Si 3 O 10 ·3H 2 O), with NaCl and NaOH solutions of different concentrations and pH values was investigated in autoclaves at temperatures up to 200 °C. Only the experiments with 1 or 2 M NaOH at 200 °C led to significant reactions, namely one or two reaction rims, depending on the reaction time. The products were studied using electron microscopy, electron-microprobe analysis and X-ray diffraction. An inner reaction rim of mesolite (Na 2 Ca 2 Al 6 Si 9 O 30 ·8H 2 O) was only observed in longer-term experiments. At all reaction times, however, a reaction rim consisting of Na,Al-substituted tobermorite 11 Å (Ca 4.5 Na 1.3 Si 5.2 Al 1.0 O 16 (OH) 2 ) formed. The reaction interfaces are sharp, and the product phases form porous pseudomorphs of the original scolecite. Some advancements of the tobermorite rim are connected to fractures formed in the scolecite. Additional Cs exchange experiments (2 x 10 –4 M CsCl, 24 °C, 18 h) on the partly reacted samples showed that Cs-Na exchange in the tobermorite did not start simultaneously in the whole reaction rim, but only at the outer part. The results indicate that replacement of scolecite takes place by coupled dissolution-precipitation, independent of the similarity between the structure of scolecite and the reaction product. There is less fluid mobility around separate crystals in a solution than could be expected, which emphasises the importance of interfacial fluids. The infiltration of the fluid into the crystal partially depends on reaction-induced fracturing.
    Print ISSN: 0935-1221
    Electronic ISSN: 1617-4011
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Schweizerbart
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2017-02-24
    Description: Fractures and faults riddle the Earth’s crust on all scales, and the deformation associated with them is presumed to have had significant effects on its petrological and structural evolution. However, despite the abundance of directly observable earthquake activity, unequivocal evidence for seismic slip rates along ancient faults is rare and usually related to frictional melting and the formation of pseudotachylites. We report novel microstructures from garnet crystals in the immediate vicinity of seismic slip planes that transected lower crustal granulites during intermediate-depth earthquakes in the Bergen Arcs area, western Norway, some 420 million years ago. Seismic loading caused massive dislocation formations and fragmentation of wall rock garnets. Microfracturing and the injection of sulfide melts occurred during an early stage of loading. Subsequent dilation caused pervasive transport of fluids into the garnets along a network of microfractures, dislocations, and subgrain and grain boundaries, leading to the growth of abundant mineral inclusions inside the fragmented garnets. Recrystallization by grain boundary migration closed most of the pores and fractures generated by the seismic event. This wall rock alteration represents the initial stages of an earthquake-triggered metamorphic transformation process that ultimately led to reworking of the lower crust on a regional scale.
    Electronic ISSN: 2375-2548
    Topics: Natural Sciences in General
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