Abstract
The Taieri Mouth locale of the Chrystalls Beach Complex (CBC) in the South Island of New Zealand includes well preserved to strongly deformed pillow lavas and flattened veins of epidote, quartz and chlorite intercalated with basalt flows and volcanoclastic breccias. The tectonic affinity for this rare igneous portion of the predominantly sedimentary CBC has not been well established in the context of its regional metamorphic geology. New field, petrographic, geochemical and isotopic evidence suggest a mid-ocean ridge origin for the Taieri metabasalts. Further, paleo-vertical networks of epidote-quartz-chlorite veins and cross-cutting faults provide a record of seafloor fracturing and fluid-flow. Altered pillows and epidote separates have δ
18
O isotope values ranging from 9.3 to 13.1‰. This indicates slightly enriched δ
18
O fractionation resulting from seafloor weathering and low-temperature (<250°C) exchange between seawater and hydrothermal fluids in basaltic fractures. Age-corrected
87
Sr/
86
Sr ratios between 0.704135 and 0.70624 show low temperature fluid-rock interactions where the altered pillows and veins did not succumb to major mineralogic changes or isotopic re-equilibration after formation. In contrast, compressed s-fold epidote and coarse quartz veins near metasediments are suggestive of the elevated temperatures and pressures during accretion. We differentiate between episodic seafloor venting and accretional wedge-related alteration recorded within these metabasalts.