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Active hydrothermal discharge on the submarine Aeolian Arc
Author(s) -
Lupton John,
de Ronde Cornel,
Sprovieri Mario,
Baker Edward T.,
Bruno Pier Paolo,
Italiano Franco,
Walker Sharon,
Faure Kevin,
Leybourne Matthew,
Britten Karen,
Greene Ronald
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2010jb007738
Subject(s) - hydrothermal circulation , seamount , geology , aeolian processes , subaerial , volcano , seafloor spreading , submarine , submarine volcano , mineralogy , geochemistry , oceanography , seismology , paleontology
In November 2007 we conducted a water column and seafloor mapping study of the submarine volcanoes of the Aeolian Arc in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea aboard the R/V Urania . On 26 conductivity‐temperature‐depth casts and tows we measured temperature, conductivity, pressure, and light scattering and also collected discrete samples for helium isotopes, methane, and pH. The 3 He/ 4 He isotope ratio, an unambiguous indicator of hydrothermal input, showed a clear excess above background at 6 of the 10 submarine volcanoes surveyed. Marsili seamount had the highest anomaly, where the 3 He/ 4 He ratio reached a δ 3 He value of 23% at 610 m depth compared with background values of ∼5%. Smaller but distinct δ 3 He anomalies occurred over Palinuro, Enarete, Eolo, Sisifo, and Secca del Capo. Although hydrothermal emissions are known to occur offshore of some Aeolian subaerial volcanoes, and hydrothermal deposits have been sampled throughout the arc, our results are the first to confirm active discharge on Marsili, Enarete, Eolo, Sisifo, and Secca del Capo. Samples collected over Lametini, Filicudi North, Alicudi North, and Alcione had δ 3 He near the regional background values, suggesting either absence of, or very weak, hydrothermal activity on these seamounts. Hydrocasts between the volcanoes revealed a consistent δ 3 He maximum between 11% and 13% at 2000 m depth throughout the SE Tyrrhenian Sea. The volcanoes of the Aeolian arc and the Marsili back arc, all <1000 m deep, cannot contribute directly to this maximum. This deep 3 He excess may be a remnant of tritium decay or may have been produced by an unknown deep hydrothermal source.

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