Literature DB >> 23676753

Deep fracture fluids isolated in the crust since the Precambrian era.

G Holland1, B Sherwood Lollar, L Li, G Lacrampe-Couloume, G F Slater, C J Ballentine.   

Abstract

Fluids trapped as inclusions within minerals can be billions of years old and preserve a record of the fluid chemistry and environment at the time of mineralization. Aqueous fluids that have had a similar residence time at mineral interfaces and in fractures (fracture fluids) have not been previously identified. Expulsion of fracture fluids from basement systems with low connectivity occurs through deformation and fracturing of the brittle crust. The fractal nature of this process must, at some scale, preserve pockets of interconnected fluid from the earliest crustal history. In one such system, 2.8 kilometres below the surface in a South African gold mine, extant chemoautotrophic microbes have been identified in fluids isolated from the photosphere on timescales of tens of millions of years. Deep fracture fluids with similar chemistry have been found in a mine in the Timmins, Ontario, area of the Canadian Precambrian Shield. Here we show that excesses of (124)Xe, (126)Xe and (128)Xe in the Timmins mine fluids can be linked to xenon isotope changes in the ancient atmosphere and used to calculate a minimum mean residence time for this fluid of about 1.5 billion years. Further evidence of an ancient fluid system is found in (129)Xe excesses that, owing to the absence of any identifiable mantle input, are probably sourced in sediments and extracted by fluid migration processes operating during or shortly after mineralization at around 2.64 billion years ago. We also provide closed-system radiogenic noble-gas ((4)He, (21)Ne, (40)Ar, (136)Xe) residence times. Together, the different noble gases show that ancient pockets of water can survive the crustal fracturing process and remain in the crust for billions of years.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23676753     DOI: 10.1038/nature12127

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  8 in total

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4.  Long-term sustainability of a high-energy, low-diversity crustal biome.

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7.  Meteorite Kr in Earth's mantle suggests a late accretionary source for the atmosphere.

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8.  Abiogenic formation of alkanes in the Earth's crust as a minor source for global hydrocarbon reservoirs.

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  8 in total
  20 in total

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5.  The contribution of the Precambrian continental lithosphere to global H2 production.

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6.  86Kr excess and other noble gases identify a billion-year-old radiogenically-enriched groundwater system.

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7.  The origin and degassing history of the Earth's atmosphere revealed by Archean xenon.

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8.  Prodigious degassing of a billion years of accumulated radiogenic helium at Yellowstone.

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9.  Thermochronologic perspectives on the deep-time evolution of the deep biosphere.

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10.  Hydrothermal 15N15N abundances constrain the origins of mantle nitrogen.

Authors:  J Labidi; P H Barry; D V Bekaert; M W Broadley; B Marty; T Giunta; O Warr; B Sherwood Lollar; T P Fischer; G Avice; A Caracausi; C J Ballentine; S A Halldórsson; A Stefánsson; M D Kurz; I E Kohl; E D Young
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-04-15       Impact factor: 49.962

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