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Naturally Occurring Microbially-Induced Smectite-to-illite Reaction 1
Jinwook Kim1*, Hailiang Dong2,3,*, Kiho Yang1, Hanbeom Park1, W. Crawford 2
Elliott4, Arthur Spivack5, Tae-hee Koo1, Gilyoung Kim6, Yuki Morono7, Susann 3
Henkel8, Fumio Inagaki9, Qiang Zeng2, Tatsuhiko Hoshino7 and Verena B. Heuer10 4
1Department of Earth System Sciences, Yonsei University, Seoul 03722, Korea. 5
2State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology, China University of 6
Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China. 7
3Department of Geology and Environmental Earth Science, Miami University, Oxford, 8
OH 45056, USA. 9
4Department of Geosciences, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302-3965, USA. 10
5Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, RI 02882, USA. 11
6Petroleum & Marine Research Division, KIGAM, Daejeon 34132, Korea. 12
7Kochi Institute for Core Sample Research, JAMSTEC, Kochi 783-8502, Japan. 13
8AWI Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Am Handelshafen 12, 27570 14
Bremerhaven, Germany. 15
9Research and Development Center for Ocean Drilling Science, JAMSTEC, Yokohama 16
236-0001, Japan.17
10MARUM Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, University of Bremen, 28359 18
Bremen, Germany. 19
*To whom correspondence should be addressed to [email protected] and20
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GSA Data Repository 2019200
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MATERIAL AND METHODS 23
Sampling Location 24
Core samples were drilled by the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) 25
through a water depth of 4,776 m into the sediment/basement interface at 1,180 meters 26
below seafloor (mbsf). Expedition 370 of the drilling vessel Chikyu (Temperature Limit 27
of the Deep Biosphere off Muroto, 10. Sept. – 23. Nov. 2016) established Site C0023 at 28
32⁰22.0018’ N and 134⁰57.9844’ E. The Nankai Trough is located at the active 29
subduction zone between the Philippine Plate and the Eurasian plate, east of Japan 30
between the Shikoku Basin and the Southwest Japan arc (Moore and Karig, 1976). The 31
subduction rate of the Shikoku Basin is ~2-4 cm/year. A thick sediment pile 32
accumulated on the young (~16Ma) basaltic basement (Seno et al., 1993). At Site 33
C0023, the sediment column consisted of varying lithologies (Unit II-V) (Heuer et al., 34
2017): II) trench-style deposition (silt and sand (IIA), terrigenous turbidites (IIB), 35
hemipelagic mud (IIC); 0-494 mbsf); III) basin style deposition (upper Shikoku Basin 36
facies including tuff and tuffaceous sedimentary rock; 494-635 mbsf); IV) 37
volcaniclastic-bearing mudstone (lower Shikoku Basin facies; 635-1,112 mbsf); and V) 38
acidic volcaniclastic-bearing mudstone (mudstones and felsic ash; 1,112-1,125mbsf) 39
(Fig.1). Details on site summary and drilling procedure should be referred to IODP Exp. 40
370 proceeding (Heuer et al., 2017). 41
Clay mineral preparation 42
A total of 49 clay samples (253.39-1,176.52 mbsf) were prepared following the 43
Jackson’s procedure (Jackson, 1969). Some volcanic ash layers were identified in the 44
core. For consistency in the analysis of S-I reaction, these layers were not sampled and 45
analysed. Core sediments (13 g) were placed in a 250 ml polypropylene copolymer 46
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(PPC) bottle (Nalgene, USA) with 10 ml of 30% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and sodium 47
acetate (NaOAc) -acetic acid (HOAc) buffer solution (pH 5.0) for 24 hours to disperse 48
clay minerals by removing organic matters. Samples were washed with distilled water 49
and then centrifuged using a Labogene 1236R centrifuge at 4,000 rpm for 30 minutes to 50
separate supernatant. Clay size fraction smaller than 2µm was collected through 51
centrifugation at 1,000 rpm for 2 minutes. 52
X-ray diffractometry 53
From the sediment cores (189 to 1,180 mbsf), clay minerals less than 2 µm in size 54
were separated from subsamples every ~50 m. Clay samples were applied to a slide 55
glass using a filter-peel method with a 0.45 µm membrane filter paper (Moore and 56
Reynolds, 1989). Samples were solvated in ethylene glycol in a desiccator overnight. 57
These oriented clay mounts were scanned over angles from 3º to 15º 2θat a speed of 58
1.5º/min, a step sizes of 0.02º with a receiving slit size of 0.3 mm and a divergence slit 59
size of 1.25º using Rigaku MiniFlex II with CuKα radiation source at 30 kV and 15 60
mA. Crystallographical Search-Match software (version 2.0.3.1) was used to identify 61
the clay mineralogy, and semi-quantitative analysis was followed (Biscaye, 1965; 62
McCarty et al., 2009) to estimate the relative proportions of smectite and illite. X-ray 63
diffraction (XRD) peaks occurring at 5.09o and 8.82o 2θ correspond to smectite and 64
illite respectively. The peaks at 9.84o and 16o 2θ correspond to illite/smectite mixed 65
layers (I/S). The positions of the I/S diffraction peaks were used to quantify the relative 66
abundances of smectite and illite (Fig. 1). Semi-quantification of illite and smectite (Fig. 67
1) was performed with both Biscaye (Biscaye, 1965) and Sybilla methods (McCarty et 68
al., 2009) showing compatible results (Supplementary DR3). 69
Kinetic modelling of smectite to illite transformation 70
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The mathematical model of the smectite to illite process was done utilizing a kinetic 71
expression for the loss of smectite. The loss of smectite was set equal to a gain in illite. 72
The loss of smectite was calculated as the product of an Arrhenius-type rate constant for 73
illitization, the concentration of smectite, and concentration of K+ in solution. The 74
illitization rate constant was calculated as the product of a pre-exponential rate constant 75
(sec-1), activation energy, Ea (kjoule/mole), and absolute temperature as shown below 76
(Altaner, 1989; Huang et al., 1993; Pytte and Reynolds, 1989; Pytte, 1982; Velde and 77
Vasseur, 1992). These models were found most applicable to certain geologic settings 78
such as burial diagenesis at high geothermal gradients such as the Salton Sea(Huang et 79
al., 1993), Tertiary and Paleozoic foreland basins (Altaner, 1989; Elliott et al., 1991); 80
Paris Basin (Velde and Vasseur, 1992); and Gulf Coast (Elliott and Matisoff, 1996; 81
Huang et al., 1993). The expressions for loss of smectite and illitization rate constants 82
are given below. 83
𝛿𝛿 𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝛿𝛿 𝑡𝑡
= −𝜅𝜅 𝑆𝑆 𝛼𝛼[𝐾𝐾+]𝛽𝛽 1 84
Where S is the concentration of smectite, α and β are dimensionless order parameters, κ 85
is the illitization rate constant defined below. 86
κ = A exp (-Ea/RT) 2 87
Where A is a pre exponential constant (sec-1). R is the gas constant. T is absolute 88
temperature. Ea is the activation energy. The order of the reaction is the sum of α and β. 89
In this study, we employed the kinetic parameters developed for burial at high 90
geothermal gradients (Huang et al., 1993). A is 80800 sec-1, α is equal to 2. β is equal to 91
1. Ea is equal to 117.5 kJ/mole. 92
A published temperature-depth model (Heuer et al., 2017) was used for geothermal 93
gradient. The amount of illite was formed at 0.1 Ma time steps by employing a kinetic 94
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model that successfully simulated the conversion of smectite to illite using geothermal 95
gradients (Elliott and Matisoff, 1996; Huang et al., 1993). Weight percent of illite 96
formed is calculated below at a given time step, temperature and K+ where the K+ in 97
solution was converted to wt.% K2O, and the amount of smectite S at the i time step and 98
the previous i-1 time steps. The quantity (1-Si-1/9.13) was the amount of smectite 99
removed written in terms of the amount of illite formed, where 9.13 wt.% was the 100
maximum K2O in muscovite or illite (Elliott and Matisoff, 1996). 101
𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆 𝑜𝑜𝑜𝑜 𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖 𝑜𝑜𝑜𝑜𝑓𝑓𝑆𝑆𝑖𝑖𝑓𝑓 𝑎𝑎𝑖𝑖 𝑖𝑖 𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑖𝑆𝑆𝑖𝑖 = −𝜅𝜅 (1 − 𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆−19.13
) 𝛼𝛼[𝐾𝐾+]𝛽𝛽 + S i-1 3 102
The calculated amount of illite was sensitive to temperature and K+ in solution. A 103
maximum value for K+ in solution was used (9.344 mmole K+ /L or 0.044 wt.% K2O) 104
given the measured K+ in the pore solutions. 105
TEM, EELS, and SEM 106
Variations in structure and elemental composition in smectite and illite were 107
measured on the lattice fringe images, selected-area electron diffraction (SAED) 108
patterns, and Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDXS) analyses. TEM samples 109
were impregnated with L.R. White resin (Kim et al., 1995) to prevent structural collapse 110
of smectite layers resulting in a layer spacing identical to that of illite, caused by the 111
dehydration of clay minerals in the high TEM vacuum. The cured samples were sliced 112
to 70 nm in thickness using an ultra microtome (ULTRACUT TCT; Leica) and then 113
placed on a holey carbon TEM Cu-grid. The lattice fringe images were then used to 114
directly differentiate the I/S mixed layers (~23 Å) from the smectite (12 Å) and illite 115
layers (10 Å) with EDXS. Illite polytypes and illite packet-size distribution were 116
measured on SAED patterns and illite lattice images, respectively (Inoue et al., 1988). 117
The quantification of Fe redox-states in smectite and illite structure was determined 118
6
using a chemical shift of Fe L2 and L3 edges, and integral intensity ratio of Fe-L2,3 edges 119
(Fe-L3 at 709 eV and Fe-L2 at 722 eV) for three phases (Van Aken et al., 1998). The 120
operational conditions for EELS acquisition included an entrance aperture of 2.0 mm, 121
energy dispersion of 0.1 eV/channel, and by setting the full width at half maximum 122
(FWHM) to 1.0 eV for the zero-loss peak calibration. Fe L-edge spectra were acquired 123
with an acquisition time of 5.0 seconds in Scanning Transmission Electron Microscope 124
(STEM) mode. The statistical optimum signal-window parameters for the integral ratio 125
of Fe-L2,3 edges were calculated using the Gatan Digital Micrograph software (Kim and 126
Dong, 2011). In particular, the background intensities were removed from EELS spectra 127
through the application of the standard power law and double arctan functions. A 128
window δ (30 eV) was selected in the background to extrapolate the curve over the post-129
edge window and the electron intensity under the extrapolated line was subtracted from 130
the total intensity (Yang et al., 2016). The Fe oxidation states of the samples were 131
determined using a universal curve as a function of the integral ratio of Fe-L3/L2 and the 132
total ferric and ferrous Fe concentration (Van Aken et al., 1998). Alteration of Fe-133
sulfides with elemental composition were examined by SEM. Samples were prepared on 134
the adhesive carbon tape then coated with Au in vacuum coater for 60 seconds prior to 135
SEM observation. 136
Geochemical Analysis 137
Concentrations of K, Si, Fe2+, SO42- and CH4in pore water were measured on board 138
during the Expedition. Details concerning sample treatment and analyses can be found 139
in the IODP Exp. 370 proceeding (Heuer et al., 2017). 140
141
REFERENCES CITED 142
7
Altaner, S. P., 1989, Calculation of K diffusional rates in bentonite beds: Geochimica et 143
Cosmochimica Acta, v. 53, no. 4, p. 923-931. 144
Biscaye, P. E., 1965, Mineralogy and sedimentation of recent deep-sea clay in the 145
Atlantic Ocean and adjacent seas and oceans: Geological Society of America 146
Bulletin, v. 76, no. 7, p. 803-832. 147
Elliott, W. C., Aronson, J. L., Matisoff, G., and Gautier, D. L., 1991, Kinetics of the 148
smectite to illite transformation in the Denver Basin: clay mineral, K-Ar data, 149
and mathematical model results (1): AAPG Bulletin, v. 75, no. 3, p. 436-462. 150
Elliott, W. C., and Matisoff, G., 1996, Evaluation of kinetic models for the smectite to 151
illite transformation: Clays and Clay Minerals, v. 44, no. 1, p. 77-87. 152
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model for smectite-to-illite conversion and its use as a geothermometer: Clays 161
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8
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12, p. 1653-1671. 177
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9
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plate consistent with NUVEL‐1 and geological data: Journal of Geophysical 189
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10, p. 967-976. 197
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201
SUPPLEMENTARY FIGURE CAPTIONS 202
Supplementary DR1. The percentages of illite which are taken as the percentages of 203
illite in I-S were calculated using equation 3 in text using the kinetic model parameters 204
(Kim et al., 1995), a published temperature-depth (age) model (Heuer et al., 2017), 0.1 205
Ma time step, and K+ (9.344 mmole K+ /L or 0.044 wt.% K2O). 206
207
Supplementary DR2. Distribution of Deltaproteobacteria with depth at Site C0023 208
obtained by 16S gene-tagged sequences (Heuer et al., 2017), showing an increase up to 209
5% in the whole microbial community at the interval II where cell count also shows an 210
abrupt increase. 211
10
212
Supplementary DR3. Relative amounts of illite with depth, calculated from the clay 213
mineral assemblage of smectite + illite + chlorite + kaolinite = 100% with Biscaye 214
modelling (Biscaye et al., 1965) (solid circles). These results were confirmed with 215
Sybilla (Pytte, 1982) modeling (open circles). 216
Fig. DR1
Fig. DR2
Fig. DR3