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Germanium in mid-ocean ridge flank hydrothermal fluids

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Title Germanium in mid-ocean ridge flank hydrothermal fluids
Names Wheat, C. Geoffrey (creator)
McManus, James (creator)
Date Issued 2008-03-27 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract We present concentrations of germanium and silicon in sediment pore waters, basaltic formation fluids,
and bulk sediment from three ridge flank hydrothermal systems (RFHS). Basaltic formation fluids from
warm (>30°C) RFHS have much higher Ge concentrations and Ge:Si molar ratios than overlying sediment
pore waters, requiring seawater-basalt reactions to dominate Ge concentrations in basaltic formation fluids.
In contrast to warm RFHS, cool (~20°C) RFHS have similar Ge concentrations in basal sediment pore
waters and underlying basaltic formation fluids, implying that there is little net exchange between these
two fluid reservoirs. Despite this low net exchange, Ge:Si molar ratios in basaltic formation fluids are
elevated compared to seawater and overlying sediment pore waters, implying that seawater-basalt reactions
must influence Ge and Si cycling. Such seawater-basalt reactions are likely associated with secondary clay
formation because increases in Ge concentration scale with Mg loss from basaltic formation fluids.
Processes that control Ge cycling in cold (3–10°C) RFHS are poorly constrained because our data are
restricted to sediment pore waters that have been overprinted by diagenetic reactions and possibly
sampling artifacts. Although net Ge fluxes from RFHS prevail over a wide temperature range, a refined
estimate for the global RFHS Ge flux is currently not possible without data from cold RFHS springs or
basaltic formation fluids because cold RFHS transport most of the convective heat and crustal fluid to the
oceans.
Genre Article
Topic ridge flank
Identifier Wheat, C. G., and J. McManus (2008), Germanium in mid-ocean ridge flank hydrothermal fluids, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 9, Q03025. doi: 10.1029/2007GC001892

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