Dear Laurie,
Following is my list of papers that related to water isotopic composition of
subduction related fluids (including gas hydrates, cold seep fluids etc.).
I'm afraid many of them might be out of your interest. Please select
suitable one from title.
Urumu Tsunogai
Borowski, W.S., C.K. Paull, and W. Ussler III, Carbon cycling within the
upper methanogenic zone of continental rise sediments: an example from the
methane-rich sediments overlying the Blake Ridge gas hydrate deposits,
Marine Chemistry, 57, 299-311, 1997.
Brooks, J.M., A.W.A. Jeffrey, T.J. McDonald, R.C. Pflaum, and K.A.
Kvenvolden, Geochemistry of hydrate gas and water from site 570, Deep Sea
Drilling Project leg 84, in Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling
Project, edited by R. von Huene, and J. Aubouin, pp. 699-703, U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, 1985.
Claypool, G.E., C.N. Threlkeld, P.N. Mankiewicz, M.A. Arthur, and T.F.
Anderson, Isotopic composition of interstial fluids and origin of metane in
slope sediment of the Middle America Trench, Deep Sea Drilling Project leg
84, in Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project, edited by R. von
Huene, and J. Aubouin, pp. 683-691, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, 1985.
Coplen, T.B., and B.B. Hanshaw, Ultrafiltration by a compacted clay
membrane-1. Oxygen and hydrogen isotopic fractionation, Geochimica et
Cosmochimica Acta, 37, 2295-2310, 1973.
Gieskes, J.M., G. Blanc, P. Vrolijk, H. Elderfield, and R. Barnes,
Interstial water chemistry - major constituents, 155-177 pp., Ocean Drilling
Program, College Station, TX, 1990.
Gieskes, J.M., P. Vrolijk, and G. Blanc, Hydrogeochemistry of the Northern
Barbados accretionary complex transect: Ocean Drilling Project Leg 110,
Journal of Geophysical Research, 95 (B6), 8809-8818, 1990.
Gieskes, J.M., C.-F. You, T. Lee, T.-F. Yui, and H.-W. Chen,
Hydrogeochemistry of mud volcanoes in Taiwan, Acta Geolocica Taiwanica, 30,
79-88, 1992.
Hesse, R., and W.E. Harrison, Gas hydrates (clathrates) causing pore-water
freshing and oxygen isotope fractionation in deep-water sedimentary sections
of terrigenous continental margins, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 55,
453-462, 1981.
Kastner, M., H. Elderfield, and J.B. Martin, Fluids in convergent margins:
what do we know about their composition, origin, role in diagenesis and
importance for oceanic chemical fluxes?, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. A, 335,
243-259, 1991.
Kastner, M., K.A. Kvenvolden, and T.D. Lorenson, Chemistry, isotopic
composition, and origin of a methane-hydrogen sulfide hydrate at the
Cascadia subduction zone, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 156, 173-183,
1998.
Kvenvolden, K.A., and M. Kastner, Gas hydrates of the Peruvian outer
continental margin, in Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project,
edited by E. Suess, and R. von Huene, pp. 517-526, Ocean Drilling Program,
College Station, TX, 1990.
Martin, J.B., M. Kastner, and P.K. Egeberg, Origins of saline fluids at
convergent margins, in Margins and marginal basins of the western Pacific,
pp. 219-239, American Geophysical Union, 1995.
Masuda, H., M. Kusakabe, and H. Sakai, Hydrogen and oxygen isotope ratios of
shales and characteristics of formation waters in sedimentary complexes
acreted at different times, Kinki district, southwest Japan, Geochim.
Cosmochim. Acta, 56, 3505-3511, 1992.
Paull, C.K., J.P. Chanton, C.S. Martens, P.D. Fullagar, A.C. Neumann, and
J.A. Coston, Seawater circulation through the flank of the Florida Platform:
evidence and implications, Marine Geology, 102, 265-279, 1984.
Suess, E., and M.J. Whiticar, Methane-derived CO2 in pore fluids expelled
from the Oregon subduction zone, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology,
Palaeoecology, 71, 119-136, 1989.
Volijik, P., A. Fisher, and J. Gieskes, Geochemical and geothermal evidence
for fluid migration in the Barbados accretionary prism (ODP leg 110),
Geophysical Research Letters, 18, 947-950, 1991.
At 6:18 PM -0500 98.11.19, Laurie Benton wrote:
>Hi List Members,
>
>I am looking for articles dealing with the hydrogen and oxygen isotope
>composition of subduction related fluids. This includes the composition of
>expelled pore fluids and fluids potentially generated by
>dehydration/breakdown of clays (including smectite-illite transition),
>opal, etc. Key word searching on GEOREF has yielded very few articles.
>Any help is appreciated.
>
>Thanks! Laurie
>
>=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=
>Laurie D. Benton
>Carnegie Institution of Washington URL: http://www.ciw.edu/
>Department of Terrestrial Magnetism e-mail: [log in to unmask]
>5241 Broad Branch Road, NW Phone: 202/686-4370 x4393
>Washington, DC 20015 FAX: 202/364-8726
>=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=
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Urumu Tsunogai, Dr. Sci.
Dept. Environ. Science & Technology, IGSSE
Tokyo Institute of Technology
4259 Nagatsuta-cho, Midori-ku,
Yokohama 226-8502, Japan
Tel. +81-45-924-5555 (or 5554)
Fax. +81-45-924-5554
E-mail [log in to unmask]
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