Submarine hydrothermal brine seeps off Milos, Greece: Observations and geochemistry.

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:1997
Authors:Fitzsimons, M. F., Dando, P. R., Hughes, J. A., Thiermann, F., Akoumianaki, I., Pratt, S. M.
Journal:Marine ChemistryMarine Chemistry
Volume:57
Pagination:325-340
Keywords:inc
Abstract:

A shallow hydrothermal brine seep located off the Greek island of Milos in the Aegean Sea was studied. The brine fluid outcropped as a pool of water in a seabed depression and was detected in the surrounding pore-waters of sediments colonised by the sulphur bacterium Achromatium volutans. The seep fluid was highly saline and sulphidic, depleted in Mg-2+ and SO-4-2-, but enriched over seawater in a+, Ca-2+, K+, Cl-, SiO-2, reduced species and dissolved gases. The high concentrations of Na+, Ca-2+ and K+ were consistent with the Milos tectonic setting. Na-K and Na-K-Ca geothermometers predicted a reservoir temperature of 300-325 degree C for the most concentrated seep samples. The deep geothermal reservoir within the metamorphic basement of Milos island has already been located and studied and may represent the source of the seep fluid. Faunal diversity was lowest in seep-influenced sediments, but a sulphide-intolerant species was found in areas of the bacterial mat where salinity and temperature were much lower. Pressure-induced variations in the vertical depth of the brine interface may be occurring in the sediment.

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