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Evidence for recent hydrothermal activity in the Central Indian Basin

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Evidence for recent hydrothermal activity in the Central Indian Basin
 
Creator Iyer, S.D.
ShyamPrasad, M.
Gupta, S.M.
Charan, S.N.
 
Subject hydrothermal activity
plate tectonics
sediments
cores
geochemistry
mineralogy
texture
seamounts
fracture zones
 
Description This study documents the first actual prof of recent intraplate volcanic-hydrothermal activity in the Central Indian Basin (CIB). Twenty-six surface sediments and a spade core (37 cm long) from the CIB were examined for the presence of Volcanogenic-Hydrothermal Materials (VHM). High concentrations of VHM were discovered in a grab and the core top - both located at the base of an intraplate seamount. The VHM consist of ochrous metalliferous sediments, volcanic spherules and glass shards. The radiolaria associated with the VHM suggest approx 10 ka age for the hydrothermal episode. The metalliferous sediments are semi-indurated, yellow to orange colored Fe-Si oxyhroxides with Fe and SiO sub(2) contents between 54 - 73% and 16 - 30%, respectively, and have been derived as a result of hydrothermal precipitation. Incipient formulation of nontronite is note to co-occur with these sediments. The CIB metalliferous sediments have close similarities to those reported from the intraplate regions of the Pacific Ocean. The volcanic spherules occur in various shapes and sizes and are dominantly composed of magnetite and lesser amounts of limenite, hematite and maghemite. Electron microscopy shows the arrangement of magnetic crystals in various texutral forms. Inclusions within the spherules are of olivine, pyroxene and feldspar. The spherules have formed by a process of liquid immiscibility of a silicic - basic magma, dependent on oxygen fugacity. Rhyolitic glass shards are ubiquitous at 1-2 cm depth in the core and constitute 55% of the coarse fraction. Microprobe analyses of the CIB shards show shards show clear differences in Ti- and Si - Al ratios that, together with the vast differences in age of eruption, preclude their derivation from Toba (Indonesia)
 
Date 2009-01-12T09:16:18Z
2009-01-12T09:16:18Z
1997
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Deep-Sea Research (I: Oceanographic Research Papers), Vol.44; 1167-1184p.
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/2045
 
Language en
 
Rights Copyright [1997]. All efforts have been made to respect the copyright to the best of our knowledge. Inadvertent omissions, if brought to our notice, stand for correction and withdrawal of document from this repository.
 
Publisher Pergamon