학술논문

Abiotic methane synthesis and serpentinization in olivine-hosted fluid inclusions
Document Type
research-article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2019 Sep 01. 116(36), 17666-17672.
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
00278424
10916490
Abstract
The conditions of methane (CH₄) formation in olivine-hosted secondary fluid inclusions and their prevalence in peridotite and gabbroic rocks from a wide range of geological settings were assessed using confocal Raman spectroscopy, optical and scanning electron microscopy, electron microprobe analysis, and thermodynamic modeling. Detailed examination of 160 samples from ultraslow- to fast-spreading midocean ridges, subduction zones, and ophiolites revealed that hydrogen (H₂) and CH₄ formation linked to serpentinization within olivine-hosted secondary fluid inclusions is a widespread process. Fluid inclusion contents are dominated by serpentine, brucite, and magnetite, as well as CH 4( g ) and H 2( g ) in varying proportions, consistent with serpentinization under strongly reducing, closed-system conditions. Thermodynamic constraints indicate that aqueous fluids entering the upper mantle or lower oceanic crust are trapped in olivine as secondary fluid inclusions at temperatures higher than ∼400 °C. When temperatures decrease below ∼340 °C, serpentinization of olivine lining the walls of the fluid inclusions leads to a near-quantitative consumption of trapped liquid H₂O. The generation of molecular H₂ through precipitation of Fe(III)-rich daughter minerals results in conditions that are conducive to the reduction of inorganic carbon and the formation of CH₄. Once formed, CH 4( g ) and H 2( g ) can be stored over geological timescales until extracted by dissolution or fracturing of the olivine host. Fluid inclusions represent a widespread and significant source of abiotic CH₄ and H₂ in submarine and subaerial vent systems on Earth, and possibly elsewhere in the solar system.