Deducing mineralogy of serpentinized and carbonated ultramafic rocks
using physical properties with implications for carbon sequestration and
subduction zone dynamics
Abstract
Serpentinization of ultramafic rocks is fundamental to modern plate
tectonics and for volatile (re-)cycling into the mantle and magmatic
arcs. Serpentinites are also highly reactive with CO2
such that they are prime targets for carbon sequestration.
Serpentinization and carbonation of ultramafic rocks results in changes
in their physical properties such that they should be detectable using
geophysical surveys; this could provide constraint on the reactivity of
rocks without extensive sample characterization. We constrain the
physio-chemical relationships in altered ophiolitic ultramafic rocks
using petrographic observations, major-element chemistry, quantitative
X-ray diffraction, and physical properties on a suite of
>400 samples from the Canadian Cordillera. Serpentinization
results in a systematic decrease in density that reflects the increase
in serpentine abundance and carbonation results in an increase in
density, mostly reflecting the formation of magnesite; based on these
data we present two formulations for determining extent of
serpentinization: one based on major-element chemistry and the other on
density. Magnetic susceptibility is variable during serpentinization;
most harzburgitic samples show a 100-fold increase in magnetic
susceptibility, whereas most dunitic samples and a minor proportion of
harzburgitic samples show very little change in magnetic susceptibility.
We use quantitative mineralogy and physical properties of the samples to
constrain a model for using density and magnetic susceptibility to
approximate the mineralogy of ultramafics rock. Although further work is
required to understand the role of remanence in applying these models to
geophysical data, this presents an advancement and opportunity to
prospect for the most reactive ultramafic rocks for carbon
sequestration.