Authors
Carles Canet, Rosa Marı́a Prol-Ledesma, Joan-Carles Melgarejo, Agnes Reyes
Publication date
2003/9/10
Journal
Marine Geology
Volume
199
Issue
3-4
Pages
245-261
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Numerous small calcite mounds, up to 2.5 m in diameter and 0.75 m in height, accompanied by Ba, Hg and Tl mineralisation, occur in shallow submarine hydrothermal vents on the sea bottom, at 10 m depth, near Punta Mita, on the western coast of Mexico. The hydrothermal activity consists in water and gas (mainly nitrogen and methane) venting at 85°C, through a 100-m-long fissure hosted in basaltic rocks and partially covered by a thin layer of unconsolidated detrital sediments. The mounds consist of travertine-like calcite aggregates that develop around the main submarine hot springs amidst a hydrothermally altered basaltic host rock. Two main calcite generations are texturally recognisable: the first generation shows a radial-fibrous texture; the second is fine-grained calcite, which cements detrital grains and fills the pore spaces. The δ13C analyses of calcite reveal a strong depletion in 13C, with values as low …
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