Scientists
have long known that veins of gold are formed by mineral deposition from hot
fluids flowing through cracks deep in Earth’s crust. But a study published
today in Nature Geoscience has found that the process can occur almost
instantaneously — possibly within a few tenths of a second.
The process
takes place along 'fault jogs' — sideways zigzag cracks that connect the main
fault lines in rock, says first author Dion Weatherley, a seismologist at the
University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.
When an
earthquake hits, the sides of the main fault lines slip along the direction of
the fault, rubbing against each other. But the fault jogs simply open up.
Weatherley and his co-author, geochemist Richard Henley at the Australian
National University in Canberra, wondered what happens to fluids circulating
through these fault jogs at the time of the earthquake.
What their
calculations revealed was stunning: a rapid depressurization that sees the
normal high-pressure conditions deep within Earth drop to pressures close to
those we experience at the surface.
For
example, a magnitude-4 earthquake at a depth of 11 kilometers would cause the
pressure in a suddenly opening fault jog to drop from 290 megapascals (MPa) to
0.2 MPa. (By comparison, air pressure at sea level is 0.1 MPa.) “So you’re
looking at a 1,000-fold reduction in pressure,” Weatherley says.
When
mineral-laden water at around 390 °C is subjected to that kind of pressure
drop, Weatherley says, the liquid rapidly vaporizes and the minerals in the
now-supersaturated water crystallize almost instantly — a process that engineers call flash
vaporization or flash deposition. The effect, he says, “is sufficiently large
that quartz and any of its associated minerals and metals will fall out of
solution”.
Eventually,
more fluid percolates out of the surrounding rocks into the gap, restoring the
initial pressure. But that doesn’t occur immediately, and so in the interim a
single earthquake can produce an instant (albeit tiny) gold vein.
Big
earthquakes will produce bigger pressure drops, but for gold-vein formation,
that seems to be overkill. More interesting, Weatherley and Henley found, is
that even small earthquakes produce surprisingly big pressure drops along fault
jogs.
“We went
all the way to magnitude –2,” Weatherley says — an earthquake so small, he
adds, that it involves a slip of only about 130 micrometers along a mere 90
centimeters of the fault zone. “You still get a pressure drop of 50%,” he
notes. That,
Weatherley adds, might be one of the reasons that the rocks in gold-bearing
quartz deposits are often marbled with a spider web of tiny gold veins. “You
[can] have thousands to hundreds of thousands of small earthquakes per year in
a single fault system,” he says. “Over the course of hundreds of thousands of
years, you have the potential to precipitate very large quantities of gold.
Small bits add up.”
Weatherley says that prospectors might be able
to use remote sensing techniques to find new gold deposits in deeply buried
rocks in which fault jogs are common. “Fault systems with lots of jogs can be
places where gold can be distributed,” he explains.
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Source:http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=earthquakes-make-gold-veins-in-an-instant
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Source:http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=earthquakes-make-gold-veins-in-an-instant
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