Reprint

Research on Submarine Hydrothermal Activity and Its Material Circulation, Magmatic Setting, and Seawater, Sedimentary, Biologic Effects

Edited by
October 2023
226 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-8978-7 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-8979-4 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Research on Submarine Hydrothermal Activity and Its Material Circulation, Magmatic Setting, and Seawater, Sedimentary, Biologic Effects that was published in

Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

Submarine hydrothermal activity has been a focus of research since its discovery in the 1970s. It is widely believed that submarine hydrothermal activity offers significant prospects for the development of mineral and biological resources, and also that it has a considerable impact on the immediate seawater environment. The study of submarine hydrothermal activity is a multi-disciplinary topic that includes tectonics, petrology, mineralogy, sedimentology, chemistry and oceanography. The development of hydrothermal circulation is controlled in tectonic and magmatic settings, including extensional tectonics where shallow magma reservoirs exist. The chemical compositions of hydrothermal fluids, which are affected by fluid–rock interactions beneath the seafloor and potentially by magma degassing are recorded in hydrothermal minerals, sediments, and seawater. Naturally, such a broad area of research cannot be advanced without the development of exploratory and analytical techniques. This Special Issue includes 13 research works, which cover the chemical and isotopic compositions of seafloor hydrothermal sulfides and fluids, the magmatic process in shallow magma reservoirs and its relations with hydrothermal system, subduction chemical recycling, and progress in exploratory and analytical technologies for seafloor hydrothermal activity.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
anglesite; element distribution and mobility; supergene Ag–Bi enrichment; sulfide; hydrothermal vent; Li-O-Mg isotopes; magma; plate subduction; Okinawa Trough; western Pacific; fluorine and chlorine; marine and stream sediment; ion chromatography; alkaline digestion; high pressure bomb; detrital zircon; sediment provenance; Okinawa Trough; element enrichment; hydrothermal vent; in-situ chemical and isotopic compositions; seafloor hydrothermal sulfides; Eastern Manus Basin; apatite; dacite; magma evolution; volatile; metal element extraction; vent fluids; hydrothermal resources; seafloor mining; strontium-hydrogen-oxygen isotopes; vent fluid; hydrothermal plume; Kueishantao hydrothermal field; Caiwei Guyot; ferromanganese crust; ferromanganese nodule; geochemistry; magma residence time; magma mixing; diffusion chronometry; magma eruption; seafloor hydrothermal activity; south mid-Atlantic ridge (SMAR); mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB); subduction; mantle heterogeneity; apatite; volatiles; thermodynamic modeling; Yonaguni Knoll IV hydrothermal field; Okinawa Trough; Tianxiu Vent Field; ultramafic-associated hydrothermal systems; near-bottom magnetic anomaly; detachment fault