Esther M. Schwarzenbach
Virginia Tech
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Featured researches published by Esther M. Schwarzenbach.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Frieder Klein; Susan E. Humphris; Weifu Guo; Florence Schubotz; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; William D. Orsi
Significance We provide biogeochemical, micropaleontological, and petrological constraints on a subseafloor habitat at the passive Iberia Margin, where mixing of reduced hydrothermal serpentinization fluids with oxic seawater provided the energy and substrates for metabolic reactions. This mixing zone was inhabited by bacteria and archaea and is comparable to the active Lost City hydrothermal field at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Our results highlight the potential of magma-poor passive margins to host Lost City-type hydrothermal systems that support microbial activity in subseafloor environments. Because equivalent systems have likely existed throughout most of Earths history in a wide range of oceanic environments, fluid mixing may have provided the substrates and energy to support a unique subseafloor community of microorganisms over geological timescales. Subseafloor mixing of reduced hydrothermal fluids with seawater is believed to provide the energy and substrates needed to support deep chemolithoautotrophic life in the hydrated oceanic mantle (i.e., serpentinite). However, geosphere-biosphere interactions in serpentinite-hosted subseafloor mixing zones remain poorly constrained. Here we examine fossil microbial communities and fluid mixing processes in the subseafloor of a Cretaceous Lost City-type hydrothermal system at the magma-poor passive Iberia Margin (Ocean Drilling Program Leg 149, Hole 897D). Brucite−calcite mineral assemblages precipitated from mixed fluids ca. 65 m below the Cretaceous paleo-seafloor at temperatures of 31.7 ± 4.3 °C within steep chemical gradients between weathered, carbonate-rich serpentinite breccia and serpentinite. Mixing of oxidized seawater and strongly reducing hydrothermal fluid at moderate temperatures created conditions capable of supporting microbial activity. Dense microbial colonies are fossilized in brucite−calcite veins that are strongly enriched in organic carbon (up to 0.5 wt.% of the total carbon) but depleted in 13C (δ13CTOC = −19.4‰). We detected a combination of bacterial diether lipid biomarkers, archaeol, and archaeal tetraethers analogous to those found in carbonate chimneys at the active Lost City hydrothermal field. The exposure of mantle rocks to seawater during the breakup of Pangaea fueled chemolithoautotrophic microbial communities at the Iberia Margin, possibly before the onset of seafloor spreading. Lost City-type serpentinization systems have been discovered at midocean ridges, in forearc settings of subduction zones, and at continental margins. It appears that, wherever they occur, they can support microbial life, even in deep subseafloor environments.
Nature Communications | 2017
Hector M. Lamadrid; J. Donald Rimstidt; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Frieder Klein; Sarah Ulrich; Andrei Dolocan; Robert J. Bodnar
The hydrothermal alteration of mantle rocks (referred to as serpentinization) occurs in submarine environments extending from mid-ocean ridges to subduction zones. Serpentinization affects the physical and chemical properties of oceanic lithosphere, represents one of the major mechanisms driving mass exchange between the mantle and the Earth’s surface, and is central to current origin of life hypotheses as well as the search for microbial life on the icy moons of Jupiter and Saturn. In spite of increasing interest in the serpentinization process by researchers in diverse fields, the rates of serpentinization and the controlling factors are poorly understood. Here we use a novel in situ experimental method involving olivine micro-reactors and show that the rate of serpentinization is strongly controlled by the salinity (water activity) of the reacting fluid and demonstrate that the rate of serpentinization of olivine slows down as salinity increases and H2O activity decreases.
Journal of Petrology | 2018
Stéphane Rouméjon; Gretchen L. Früh-Green; Beth N. Orcutt; S.L. Green; Carol J. Cotterill; Sally Morgan; Norikatsu Akizawa; G. Bayrakci; Jan Hinrich Behrmann; Emilio Herrero-Bervera; Chiara Boschi; William J. Brazelton; Mathilde Cannat; Kristina G. Dunkel; J. Escartin; Michelle Harris; Kirsten Hesse; Barbara E. John; Susan Q. Lang; Marvin D. Lilley; Hai-Quan Liu; Lisa E. Mayhew; Andrew McGaig; Bénédicte Ménez; Yuki Morono; Marianne Quéméneur; Amila Sandaruwan Ratnayake; Matthew O. Schrenk; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Katrina I. Twing
Serpentinized and metasomatized peridotites intruded by gabbros and dolerites have been drilled on the southern wall of the Atlantis Massif (Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 30°N) during International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 357. They occur in seven holes from five sites making up an east-west trending, spreading-parallel profile that crosscuts this exhumed detachment footwall. Here we have taken advantage of this sampling to study heterogeneities of alteration at scales less than a kilometer. We combine textural and mineralogical observations made on 77 samples with in situ major and trace element analyses in primary and serpentine minerals to provide a conceptual model for the development of alteration heterogeneities at the Atlantis Massif. Textural sequences and mineralogical assemblages reveal a transition between an initial pervasive phase of serpentinization and subsequent serpentinization and metasomatism focused along localized pathways preferentially used by hydrothermal fluids. We propose that these localized pathways are interconnected and form 100 m- to 1 km-sized cells in the detachment footwall. This change in fluid pathway distribution is accompanied by variable trace element enrichments in the serpentine textures: deep, syn-serpentinization fluid-peridotite interactions are considered the source of Cu, Zn, As, and Sb enrichments, whereas U and Sr enrichments are interpreted as markers of later, shallower fluid-serpentinized peridotite interaction. Alteration of gabbros and dolerites emplaced in the peridotite at different lithospheric levels leads to the development of amphibole, chlorite and, or, talc-bearing textures as well as enrichments in LREE, Nb, Y, Th, Ta in the serpentine textures of the surrounding peridotites. Combining these observations, we propose a model that places the drill holes in a conceptual frame involving mafic intrusions in the peridotites and heterogeneities during progressive alteration and emplacement on the seafloor.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Mark J. Caddick; Matthew Petroff; Benjamin C. Gill; Emily H.G. Cooperdock; Jaime D. Barnes
Subduction zones impose an important control on the geochemical cycling between the surficial and internal reservoirs of the Earth. Sulphur and carbon are transferred into Earth’s mantle by subduction of pelagic sediments and altered oceanic lithosphere. Release of oxidizing sulphate- and carbonate-bearing fluids modifies the redox state of the mantle and the chemical budget of subduction zones. Yet, the mechanisms of sulphur and carbon cycling within subduction zones are still unclear, in part because data are typically derived from arc volcanoes where fluid compositions are modified during transport through the mantle wedge. We determined the bulk rock elemental, and sulphur and carbon isotope compositions of exhumed ultramafic and metabasic rocks from Syros, Greece. Comparison of isotopic data with major and trace element compositions indicates seawater alteration and chemical exchange with sediment-derived fluids within the subduction zone channel. We show that small bodies of detached slab material are subject to metasomatic processes during exhumation, in contrast to large sequences of obducted ophiolitic sections that retain their seafloor alteration signatures. In particular, fluids circulating along the plate interface can cause sulphur mobilization during several stages of exhumation within high-pressure rocks. This takes place more pervasively in serpentinites compared to mafic rocks.
Lithos | 2013
Jeffrey C. Alt; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Gretchen L. Früh-Green; Wayne C. Shanks; Stefano M. Bernasconi; Carlos J. Garrido; Laura Crispini; Laura Gaggero; José Alberto Padrón-Navarta; Claudio Marchesi
Chemical Geology | 2013
Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Gretchen L. Früh-Green; Stefano M. Bernasconi; Jeffrey C. Alt; Alessio Plas
Chemical Geology | 2016
Xiangli Wang; Noah J. Planavsky; Christopher T. Reinhard; Huijuan Zou; Jay J. Ague; Yuanbao Wu; Benjamin C. Gill; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2012
Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Gretchen L. Früh-Green; Stefano M. Bernasconi; Jeffrey C. Alt; Wayne C. Shanks; Laura Gaggero; Laura Crispini
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2014
Ricardo Sánchez-Murillo; Esteban Gazel; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Melitza Crespo-Medina; Matthew O. Schrenk; Jan Boll; Ben C. Gill
Chemical Geology | 2012
Jeffrey C. Alt; Wayne C. Shanks; Laura Crispini; Laura Gaggero; Esther M. Schwarzenbach; Gretchen L. Früh-Green; Stefano M. Bernasconi