New article in Chemical Geology

Volcanogenic aluminosilicate alteration drives formation of authigenic phases at the northern Hikurangi margin: Implications for subseafloor geochemical cycles

Luo, m., Hong, W-L., Torres, M.E., Kutterolf, S., Pank, K., Hopkins, J.L., Solomon, E.A., Wang, K.-L., Lee, H.-Y., 2023. Volcanogenic aluminosilicate alteration drives formation of authigenic phases at the northern Hikurangi margin: Implications for subseafloor geochemical cycles. Chemical Geology: 619, 121317, ISSN 0009-2541. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2023.121317

Highlights

  • Pore fluid data and petrographic analyses suggests ongoing VA alteration.
  • The majority of the dissolved elements released by VA alteration have been trapped in authigenic phases.
  • An increase in the rates of VA alteration was driven by enhanced VA input due to slope instability.
  • We highlight the important role of VA diagenesis in impacting subsurface geochemical cycles.

 

Abstract
Alteration of volcanogenic aluminosilicates (VAs) in marine sediments is recognized as critical in regulating geochemical cycles and sustaining the oceanic deep biosphere, but rates of VA alteration and its associated authigenic mineral formation are not commonly reported. Here we present results on analyses of sediments and pore water recovered from the upper 150 mbsf of four sites drilled on the northern Hikurangi margin during IODP Expeditions 372 and 375. Petrographic analyses show that volcanogenic materials (glass shards, feldspar, volcanic lithoclasts) constitute important components (15–45 wt%) of the hemipelagic mud, and reveal ongoing glass alteration with accompanying authigenic phase formation. A reaction-transport model constrained by pore water Sr, 87Sr/86Sr, Ca, Mg, and Si was applied to simulate VA diagenetic reactions. Our model results yield VA alteration rates of 0.047–0.64 mmol Sr m−2 yr−1, with substantially higher values at Sites U1517 and U1520 that experienced rapid sediment emplacement. In addition, our simulations show that >99% of the dissolved Si generated by VA alteration is fixed in silica cement and authigenic clay, and that ∼50% of Ca incorporated in the authigenic carbonate is supplied by VA alteration. First-order estimates suggest that, in addition to authigenic carbonate precipitation, authigenic clay formation may represent an important sink for dissolved Mg. This study quantitatively examines the linkage between VA alteration and formation of authigenic phases, highlights its role in subsurface geochemical cycles, and indicates that slope instability may play an important role in promoting VA diagenesis.