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Seafloor massive sulfide (SMS) potential within and beyond national jurisdiction in the Asia-Pacific region Raymond Binns CSIRO Earth Science and Resource Engineering, Sydney Research School of Earth Sciences Australian National University, Canberra Acknowledgements: Nautilus Minerals Inc. ISA: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT NEEDS FOR EXPLORATION AND EXPLOITATION OF DEEP SEABED MINERALS November 2011 “SMS” are bodies of metallic sulfides precipitated at and near the sea floor when submarine volcanic hot-spring fluids (250-350ºC) mix with cold seawater, typically at depths of 10003000m. High pressure inhibits boiling. The process is inefficient, creating buoyant “smoke” laced with fine mineral particles. The structures formed on the seafloor have been called “chimneys” despite often complex shapes! Close-up of “smoking” chimneys, 30-50 cm high 3m-high “chimney” SMS deposits occur mainly at the margins of tectonic plates, with two main settings plate margin Convergent plate margin Divergent plate margin (subduction zones) (spreading axes) Ultramafic exhumation Red Sea oozes SMS History • 1965 Metal enrichments noted in ………... sediments on East Pacific Rise • 1977 First SMS (inactive) discovered ……….…in Galapagos Rift, east Pacific • 1979 First “black smoker” SMS ………….East Pacific Rise at 21ºN • 1986 First SMS in a subduction …………setting (Manus Basin PNG) • 2005 First commercial SMS …………survey (Manus Basin, PNG) The “National Geographic” black smoker chimney • 2600 m water depth • 350°C hot, metal-rich fluids • 2013? First SMS mine (Nautilus, PNG) Young Chimneys • actively venting fields • individual chimneys short-lived • “smoke” helps find them • chemosynthetic microbes quickly populate surfaces, providing food for remarkable macrofauna Chimney grew 60 cm in 2 days over a drill hole Old Chimneys (extinct fields) • Environmentally-favoured targets for mining? • Harder to find (no “smoke”) • Will valuable metals be preserved when “weathered”? Why consider mining SMS? Solwara-1 chimney, Eastern Manus Basin PNG Cu 25.7% Au 58 g/ton Zn Ag 97 g/ton 0.2% $US 5,800 per ton or $US 19,000 per cubic metre 2.5 metres tall What lies below the chimneys? “Roman Ruins” field, Manus Basin PNG 3 metre high composite chimney 2. Deeper subseafloor mineralisation 1. Mound of fallen chimneys 3. Footwall stockwork Solwara-1 (PNG) profile (based on drilling) Chimneys high Cu, Au upper semimassive sulfides: high Cu, Au 2008 Resource (Nautilus Minerals) fallen chimneys ... . . . ... . .. lithified tephra (some sulfides) deeper massive sulfides: moderate Cu, Au 2.2 million tonnes sulfide veins (‘stockwork’) 7.2% copper 6.2 g/ton gold = US$ 950 per ton footwall (altered volcanics) most is sub-seafloor Production cost US$150/ton? RAB 11/2011 NOT TO SCALE Solwara 7 151º41‘ E Clustered SMS chimney fields at PACMANUS, ManusHydrothermal Basin PNG Field PACMANUS Rogers Ruins Roman Ruins Satanic Mills Snowcap Fenway Tsukushi Solwara 8 Metres below sea level 2100 Solwara 6 2000 1900 1800 1700 Chimneys 1650 Alteration N Regional-scale clusters of SMS deposits 100 km Manus Basin, Bismarck Sea, PNG (Nautilus Minerals) Contrasted SMS genesis at the two main plate-tectonic settings plate margin Convergent plate margin Divergent plate margin (subduction zones) (spreading axes) MID-OCEAN SPREADING AXIS Next slide (divergent or “constructive” plate boundary) OCEAN BASALT CRUST MAGMA MANTLE Molten MAGMA forms when plates spread apart and pressure drops in hot (1200ºC) mantle. It then rises and solidifies to form new basaltic crust. MID-OCEAN SPREADING AXES Hydrothermal systems MAGMA • Magma body is a heat engine driving fluid circulation. “Dry” reduced magmas. • Seawater becomes reduced & acidic by reaction with crustal rocks (sulfate sulfide) • Metals leached from traversed crustal rocks, especially in “high-T reaction zone” • Fe (pyrite) dominates sulfides deposited at seafloor vents, Zn minor and Cu less so. SUBDUCTION ZONES (convergent plate boundaries) TRENCH MANTLE MANTLE Magma forms when aqueous fluids from the down-going slab flux melting in the hot mantle, and magma rises to build a Volcanic Arc. Some erupts in the Backarc Basin. Resultant lavas are relatively oxidised, hydrous, and siliceous compared to mid-ocean magmas. SUBDUCTION ZONES Arc and Back-Arc hydrothermal systems • Water-rich oxidised magmas erupted as more siliceous lavas (andesite, dacite) • Magmatic fluids yield a higher input of Cu and Au, less Fe. Seawater also entrained. • Prominent hydrous alteration permits more sub-seafloor mineralisation? Back-arc basins may contain small “spreading axes” as well as conventional arc-like submarine volcanoes (cones, ridges) 2 1 Oblique convergence between the Pacific and Australian plates causes NW-SE extension in the Manus Basin. This is accommodated between major faults by ....... 1 distributed extensional rifting and arcstyle volcanism in the far east, and......... ........focussed spreading with basaltic infill 2 in the central basin Hydrothermal venting and SMS deposits occur in both settings. Arc-style volcanism produces the richest SMS deposits Hannington et al 2011 USGS Ring of Fire Arcs, SMS, and EEZs Subaerial Seismicity, bathymetry volcanoes USGS Arcs, SMS, and EEZs Seismicity, bathymetry Japan Arcs, SMS, and EEZs Seismicity, bathymetry Okinawa Trough and Izu-Bonin Arc, Japan Sea of Japan Pacific Plate Myojin Knoll (Sunrise) Okinawa Trough Izu-Bonin Rise Philippine Sea Plate Volcanoes Mariana Trough Subaerial Submarine Suiyo Seamount Myojin Knoll Frontal arc volcano with a large summit caldera and a postcaldera resurgent dome. Sunrise field estimated at 9 million tons from topography, not confirmed by drilling SUNRISE DEPOSIT 1 km Cu Zn % % Sunrise 6 Suiyo Smt 12 20 15 Pb Au • extends from caldera floor to lower talus slope (1360-1210 mbsl) Ag % g/t g/t 2 2 18 1210 28 190 • mound 400 m across, 30 m high • maximum vent T 278ºC • 9 million tons? Okinawa Trough Kagoshima Kagoshima • “Backarc” rift on continental crust • No active arc associated with trench! • Explosive, siliceous volcanism in rift Minami-Ensei Ihena North CLAM Jade-Izena Okinawa Philippine Sea Plate 200 km Cu % Jade 3 Ihena 3 Jade Ihena Zn Pb Au Ag % % g/t g/t 25 12 3.3 1150 31 14 1.2 465 Jade estimated at 7 Mt,at$2,300 Jade estimated 7 Mt / ton Marianas Arcs, SMS, and EEZs Seismicity, bathymetry J NM Remnant arc G FSM PNG Arcs, SMS, and EEZs Seismicity, bathymetry PNG EEZ Solomons, Vanuatu Arcs, SMS, and EEZs Seismicity, bathymetry Ontong Java Plateau PNG Triple Junction JCT Australian Plate PNG FJ THE AREA AUS Active subduction Inactive trench Spreading axis N Fiji S.R. CT FJ MH Hunter Ridge The “Triple Junction”, NW Solomon Islands Ghizo Ridge Simbo Ridge Kana Keoki Smt Plume anomaly 96SO6 Smt PNG Coleman Smt SOL Eastern Solomon Islands and Vanuatu Hydrothermal Indications SOL Vate Trough VAN Erromango Erromanga Trough Trough Futuna Trough Fiji Tonga NZ Arcs, SMS, and EEZs Seismicity, bathymetry North Fiji Basin South Fiji Basin North Fiji Basin • Unusually large area of ”backarc TUV TA oceanic” crust • Greatest length of spreading ridges per area of ocean floor SOL • Orientation of some ridges difficult to explain FJ TA • Perhaps initiated in the forearc of the Vitiaz subduction zone VAN • Still propagating southwards (into the Hunter Ridge) • 4 chimney fields within 4 km near junction of 3 spreading ridges Cu Zn Au Ag % % g/t g/t . White Lady 8.0 4.7 Pere Lachaise 17.9 5.9 4.1 216 Sonne-99 0.6 12.8 3.6 309 FJ MH North Fiji Basin 21º 30’ S 22º 00’ S Fiji EEZ 22º 30’ S Matthew Hunter Is. EEZ 173º 00’ E 174º 00’ E Is the Hunter Ridge a “look-alike” of the Manus Basin? Lau Basin – Havre Trough Back-arc to the Tonga-Kermadec Arc Tonga Tonga Trench New Zealand KA Island volcano Submarine volcano NZ Sulfides (arc) Lau Basin Kings 3 Jn Tonga Cu Zn Au Ag . % Kings 3 Jn % 5.6 28.2 g/t Central Lau SR g/t 18 East Lau SR Valu Fa Ridge White Church 0.4 Vai Lili 5.3 26.9 3.3 124 Hine Hina 6.5 2.6 83 1.6 11.0 1.4 405 Valu Fa Ridge 1887 Proclamation Environmental Issues The Geologist’s Perspective • Resilient fauna survives natural hazards • dispersed particulates, toxic chemistry • tectonic disturbances (earthquakes) • turbidity currents, explosive volcanism • Biota ultimately doomed (systems short-lived) What about the long-term future? • Geophysics will find buried deposits? • More overburden sediment • Robotic mining? • Large-scale “opencast” mining • Future sub-seafloor (equivalent of …underground mining on land)? • Could open up the older arcs for ...exploitation (“submerged PNGs”)? • Start learning from experience • Careful observations and relevant …experiments during initial mining …activities A missing deposit type in today’s oceans (sediment hosted massive sulfides in rifts lacking volcanism) “Exhalative sulfides” (“SEDEX” deposit) Seawater (modern) or… Cover Sequence (ancient) Rift-filling sediments Basement Basinal brines “Growth Fault” Hotter, deeper crust Known in ancient sequences, e.g. Red Dog Alaska: >85M tons of 18.2% Zn, 4.6% Pb