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15 - New Perspectives on Abiotic Organic Synthesis and Processing during Hydrothermal Alteration of the Oceanic Lithosphere

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 October 2019

Beth N. Orcutt
Affiliation:
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, Maine
Isabelle Daniel
Affiliation:
Université Claude-Bernard Lyon I
Rajdeep Dasgupta
Affiliation:
Rice University, Houston

Summary

Over the last decade, there has been an increased focus on describing condensed carbonaceous matter in rocks in several ultramafic settings and in experiments. This organic carbon – unaccounted for until now – seems to be ubiquitous in the crust, with profound implications for the deep carbon cycle and the sustainability of deep microbial ecosystems. Among the suite of abiotic organic compounds that may have formed abiotically in serpentinizing systems in particular are molecules of prebiotic interest, including a series of amino acids. In this chapter, the geochemical pathways for the abiotic synthesis of condensed carbonaceous matter are described, as well as the thermodynamic stability of such compounds and both their biotic and abiotic processing in the crust.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 15.1 (a) A vein of karpatite (yellow crystals) surrounded by quartz (white crystals) and cinnabar (red spots). Scanning electron micrographs of (b) the broken surface of native karpatite and (c) its layering at the end of the layered structure.

Reproduced with permission of Springer Nature, from Potticary et al. (2017), Sci Rep, 7, 9867, figures 1b, 2a,b.46
Figure 1

Table 15.1 Organic minerals related to hydrothermal alteration in mafic and ultramafic rocks.38,47 With the exception of evenkite, which is classified as an alkane mineral, all are PAH minerals (adapted from Echigo and Kimata39).

Figure 2

Figure 15.2 Examples of occurrences of organic carbon in serpentinized oceanic rocks. (a) Scanning electron micrograph of O-bearing condensed carbonaceous matter (CCM) abiotically formed jointly with hematite (Hem) and saponite (Sap) during the low-T alteration (T < 150°C) of oceanic serpentinites of the Ligurian Tethyan ophiolites. (b) Associated elemental distributions of carbon (red) and iron (green) within the square area in (a). Reproduced with permission of Springer Nature, from Sforna et al. (2018), Nat Commun, 9, 5049, figure 2c and d.55 (c) Transmission electron micrograph showing polyhedral serpentine (pol-spt) sections wet by a jelly film of organic carbon interfacing between the pol-spt and an andraditic hydrogarnet (H-adr) in serpentinites from the MAR (4-6°N). In these rocks, organic carbon was shown to mediate the nucleation and growth of polyhedral and polygonal serpentine from the hydrogarnet.

Reproduced with permission of Elsevier, from Ménez et al. (2018), Lithos, 323, 262–276.56
Figure 3

Figure 15.3 (a) Evolution of H2 concentration in hydrothermal fluid as a function of serpentinization degree estimated from mass balance calculation on Fe2+ and Fe3+ in abyssal peridotite. (b) Differences in H2 concentrations, generated by the spatial heterogeneity of reaction, create a redox gradient between partly and fully serpentinized areas down to the micrometric scale.

Modified with permission of Elsevier, from Andreani et al. (2013), Lithos, 178, 70–83, figure 9b.64
Figure 4

Figure 15.4 Oxidation states of carbon in some single-carbon organic compounds. The water–gas shift reaction (15.1) is represented along with the successive reversible redox reactions that control the speciation of single-carbon compounds under hydrothermal conditions.44,101

Figure 5

Figure 15.5 Examples of CM that precipitated in hydrothermal experiments. (a) Poorly crystallized graphitic phase (round particles) formed during high-T (400–500°C) carbonation of olivine. (b) Amorphous carbon precipitation during low-T (100°C) carbonation of a sandstone made of Fe2+-rich volcanic clasts. (c, d) Two different types of CM precipitated during low-T (200–300°C) siderite dissolution: a poorly structured hydrated or hydrogenated carbonaceous phase (c) and a more ordered graphitic phase (d).

Reproduced with permission of Elsevier, from (a) Dufaud et al. (2009), Chem Geol, 265, 79–87, figure 6,125 (b) Luquot et al. (2012), Chem Geol, 294–295, 75–88, figure 10,126 and (c, d) Milesi et al. (2015), Geochim Cosmochim Acta, 154, 201–211, figures 4 and 5a.127
Figure 6

Figure 15.6 Sketch depicting the main stages of carbon processing in the oceanic lithosphere during the multistage fluid–rock reactions133 recorded in such dynamic systems. (a) Geologic setting of a slow-spreading ridge where mantle is tectonically exhumed, simultaneously with localized and ephemeral magmatic injections. These environments appear to be the most favorable ones for abiotic organic synthesis according to the available natural observations, experiments, and thermodynamic calculations. (b) Summary of the three main stages of carbon processing in a column of the oceanic lithosphere shown in (a), illustrated through a magnification of the mantle rock textures along with the hypothetical nature of the percolating fluids. See the text for details. alk = alkanes.

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