Introduction

Intrusion and extrusion of basalts in large igneous provinces (LIP) such as the Siberian Traps, the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) and the Karoo have long been correlated with significant climate effects and extinction pulses due to the release of CO2, Hg, and SO21,2,3,4,5. For example, the Permo-Triassic warming and mass extinction was proposed to be due to the release of greenhouse gases by Siberian Traps magmas themselves and/or by thermal release of CO2 and CH4 from early Paleozoic coal beds that were heated by the associated basalts and dikes5. To better understand the effects that LIPs have on the climate and environment, a better knowledge of how and to what degree the shallow continental crust is altered by meteoric waters in volcanically active areas is paramount.

Meteoric-hydrothermal cells generated by shallow cooling dikes have the potential to volatilize organics by either oxidation to CO2, or by reduction to CH4. Such effects were observed in geologically-obvious hydrothermal explosion pipes above shallowly emplaced basaltic lavas in the Karoo, CAMP, and Siberian LIPs, all of which are associated with climatic disruption6,7,8. However, the role of water is more cryptic in outcrop, and evidence of hydrothermal modification of crust commonly requires careful isotopic analysis to search for the tell-tale δ18O depletion that fingerprints the involvement of meteoric water, both in continents and also in submarine environments.

The role and extent of impact and influence of low-δ18O meteoric water on normal to high δ18O (supra)crustal rocks have been a subject of prior discussion in the 1970s to late 1980s9, but because many labs have since shifted to the analysis of unaltered phenocrysts, the effects of whole-rock modifications of volcanically active areas has become a topic of subordinate interest. A need thus exists for the study of the oxygen isotope impact of cooling magma bodies in a large igneous province setting.

In this study, we use oxygen and hydrogen isotope measurements and fluid circulation models to quantify the degree of hydrothermal metamorphism of the shallow continental crust produced by the dike swarms that fed the ~16 Ma Columbia River Flood Basalt Province (CRB), which will form a critical basis for understanding both the origin of low-δ18O rhyolites that erupted as part of the CRB (e.g.10,11) and the potential impact on climate from degassing of crustal rocks.

Geologic background

The Columbia River Flood Basalt Province (CRB; Fig. 1) is the youngest and one of the most well-studied LIPs in the world, and consists of as much as 210,000 km3 of basalt and perhaps 10,000 km3 of coeval rhyolites11,12,13,14. Past and recent high-precision dating suggests that 95% of the main phase of the CRB, represented by the Grand Ronde basaltic to andesitic lavas, erupted between 16.7 and 15.9 Ma4,10, suggesting a high rate of both eruption and intrusion. However, the emplacement of the CRB had, if at all, only a minor impact on climate and environment3,5.

Figure 1
figure 1

(a) Columbia River Basalt province showing dikes, lava flows and silicic centers coeval with the CRBs and younger (modified after11) as well as sample locations. See Table S1 for chemical and isotopic values. Roman numerals indicate dike groups. (b) Field photograph of the Maxwell Lake dike where basalt melted granitic wall rock of Wallowa Batholith (see Fig. S1 for detailed view of the contact).

Single lava flows extending 300 km (such as the Roza flow, with average volume of individual lavas ~1300 km314) document the high intensity of the eruptions and likely large magma supply rates. Still more dramatically and relevant for this study is the Wapshilla Ridge Member (WRM) of the Grande Ronde Formation, which is with an estimated volume of ~40,000 km33 the largest package of lava flows in the CRB. It is bracketed by overlapping zircon ashfall dates of 16.288 ± 0.039 Ma and 16.254 ± 0.034 Ma by4, which highlights its high eruption rate.

These basalts are associated with extensive dike swarms (Fig. 1), which may have played a role in the small climatic impact of the CRB through heating and contact metamorphism of the crust4,5,8. While many of the dikes are buried under the thick CRB lavas, recent uplift of the province in the east has exposed inner workings of the crustal dike system (down to ~2 km depth15,16,17), allowing an insight into dike-crust interactions18,19,20. This unique setting shows that dikes intruded into a variety of rock types including earlier erupted CRB lavas, granitic batholiths, and Paleozoic metasedimentary rocks that often contain organic-rich shale and carbonates. Dikes range in thickness from 1 to >100 m, although the distribution strongly peaks at ~8 m, and larger structures likely record multiple reoccupations15,16. Based on the number of segments exhibiting partial melt in host rocks16, an estimated 3% of all known dikes served as feeders for lava flows and long-lived transport was probably highly localized along strike19. As they would have been potentially active for much longer, these feeder dikes likely caused larger degrees of thermal metamorphism and contact melting in country rocks than dead-end dikes that did not reach the surface18,19,20.

We analyzed 27 samples from 22 different dikes, as well as a detailed profile from wall rock to dike for the 10 m-wide Maxwell Lake dike (total of 23 samples) of the Columbia River Flood Basalt Province for their oxygen isotope compositions (Fig. 1). The Maxwell Lake dike has been geochemically correlated with the WRM and therefore the peak of CRB activity, and cross-cuts tonalitic granites of the Jurassic Wallowa Batholith in Oregon, USA15,18,19. Previous studies of the degree of dehydration partial melting of the wall rocks18 and apatite and zircon thermochronology of those same wall rocks19, have demonstrated that country rock was heated to as much as 900 °C at the dike contact and to 100 °C above background temperatures at distances of up to 100 m from the dike. Thermal modeling further suggested that the dike supported a continuous flow of magma for ~4–7 years, and therefore likely fed WRM flows18,19,20. Previous thermal models have, however, neglected the potential role of circulating hydrothermal fluids in cooling the dike, and the degree to which these fluids hydrothermally alter the country rock is unclear, both of these unknowns we resolve and emphasize with this study.

Methods

Isotope geochemistry

The 27 samples from small and large dikes of the CRB (Fig. 1) were analyzed for oxygen isotopes using laser fluorination and hydrogen isotopes + water using TCEA at the University of Oregon following published methodology (Appendix, Methods, all data are relative to VSMOW, errors are ±0.1‰ for δ18O, 1–3‰ for δD and ±0.05 wt% for H2O). For these samples, we relied on groundmass that record the effects of water-rock interaction and exchange oxygen easily. The same techniques for oxygen isotope measurements have been applied to the 23 samples from the profile across the Maxwell Lake dike and wall rock granite. Nine of these samples were previously studied for U-He ages19 while the other 14 samples were newly collected by us. Here, we measured the O isotopic composition of plagioclase and groundmass, two phases that nearly identically record the effects of water-rock interaction with comparable isotope fractionations9. In addition to plagioclase, we also analyzed other phases prone to aqueous alteration: magnetite, biotite and quenched melt (fine grained groundmass with glass), as well as quartz, pyroxene and amphibole - materials that are alteration-resistant and thus should reflect the original (unaltered magmatic) δ18O values.

XRF analyses for studied dikes were also obtained (see Appendix Table S1). Finally, we dated zircon grains (LA-ICPMS at the University of Bern, Switzerland) from samples CRB-60 (dike) and CRB-69 (granite) that define the contact melting zone of the Maxwell Lake dike, hoping that they would reflect the age of the dike. Unfortunately, no juvenile zircon of CRB age were found (Appendix Fig. S5, Table S3); instead, they are similar to published ages of other parts of the Wallowa batholith (125.6 ± 0.6 Ma21).

Modeling

Modeling of hydrothermal fluid flow around a vertical cooling dike with a magma flow and hydrothermal circulation was done using the MUFITS program22, http://www.mufits.imec.msu.ru, which is a non-commercial reservoir simulator package, and is used for analysis of non-isothermal multiphase multicomponent flows in porous media (see Appendix for detailed methods and equations solved). In order to account for the heat from the flowing magma, we added point sources in computational domain cells located within a dike. Point sources were active for several years and then as magma flow stops, convective cooling of the dike occurs due to water circulation. Oxygen isotope exchange between fluid and country rock is calculated in a separate module that solves an advection-diffusion-reaction equation for known velocity and temperature fields. The exchange reaction is taken in Arrhenius form with a temperature-dependent reaction rate23,24. Further details on parameters used and oxygen isotope fractionation factors for rocks and water are given in the Appendix.

Results

Oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in the dikes and intruded crust

Oxygen and H isotope data, water content and XRF element concentrations are presented in appendix Tables S1-S2. Laser-ablation zircon U-Pb ages are shown in appendix Table S3. Whole-rock oxygen isotope compositions of CRB dikes are 1–2‰ lower on average than the δ18O of CRB lava flows (Fig. 2). The latter were quenched on the surface quickly without interaction with groundwater. The total magnitude of downward δ18O shift in dikes is even greater when considering that many of the CRB lavas are originally ~1‰ higher in δ18O than the mantle25,26,27.

Figure 2
figure 2

Comparison of δ18O values of dikes and lavas from the Columbia River Basalt province. Steen lavas represent early erupted primitive CRBs. The lower-δ18O values of dikes is explained by the effects of syn- to post-intrusive hydrothermal alteration by heated groundwater flow. The Maxwell Lake dike is outlined in green with country rocks (dashed blue) near the contact achieving the lowest δ18O values. Data for dikes is in the Appendix Tables. Oxygen isotope data for CRB lavas are from literature11,25,26,27 and were often obtained in the same lab (reported in11,27).

The lowering in δ18O values in the dikes is considered a clear sign of high-temperature alteration by meteoric water, as weathering and secondary hydration increase (not decrease) the δ18O of altered material. This is because the isotopic fractionation factor between rock and water is greater than 16‰ (rock minus water) at temperatures lower than 90–125 °C (Appendix Fig. S4). Furthermore, meteoric water δ18O in the region in the mid-Miocene was likely heavier than the modern value of −11 to −14‰ on account of the then warmer climate8. Therefore, low temperature (≤100 °C) rock alteration (e.g. surface weathering effects) would have resulted in δ18O values much higher than is observed. This implies that our observed low-δ18O signal in the CRB-dikes (Fig. 2) is a product of high-temperature processes, associated with their intrusion and crystallization. We suspect that cooling of the dikes in a water-rich matrix drove a “self-inflicted” hydrothermal alteration during their prolonged syn-plutonic cooling that caused the low-δ18O values. The spatial extent of alteration is also in agreement with the previously-observed partial melting and resetting of He thermochronological clocks in apatite and zircon of the Maxwell Lake dike18,19, but extended to much smaller dike systems.

The hydrogen isotope (δD) of groundmass of the studied dikes also have meteoric, low-δD signatures of −128 ± 5‰ VSMOW, and dikes are hydrated to 1.2 wt% water on average (Table S1). As secondary alteration processes, such as weathering, can also lower δD values, we here document this low-δD data, but we do not rely on them for interpretation. They are likely a combination of a hydrothermal alteration signal from CRB times and later cold hydration.

For the Maxwell Lake dike, we profiled this hydrothermal system in detail with a O isotope transect of both dike material and country rock across both sides of the dike (Fig. 3). The zone of low-δ18O alteration as documented by plagioclase and groundmass extends on both sides of the contact to distances of at least 50 meters. The lowest δ18O values of 2.5–4‰ are observed in both the partially molten and quenched granite and in the dike itself in the vicinity of the contacts on either side. More distant areas from the contacts have non-monotonically increasing δ18O in plagioclase, corresponding to variably disturbed Δ18Oquartz-plagioclase values. It is noteworthy that quartz, an alteration resistant mineral, shows no signs of lowering in δ18O, even in the partially molten zone near the contact (Fig. 3). Additional analyses of amphibole, pyroxene, biotite and magnetite returned δ18O values between magmatic values in equilibrium with quartz, and secondary values reflecting chloritization and oxidation by hydrothermal fluids. The δD value of the dike center is very low at −144‰ with 1.7 wt% water (Table S1). Oxygen isotope values of plagioclase and groundmass are used to monitor δ18O values of alteration intensity, which is shown in Fig. 3.

Figure 3
figure 3

Oxygen isotope profile across the Maxwell Lake dike, the partially molten contact zone, and the tonalitic granites of Wallowa Batholith. Notice that the contact zone is the most depleted in δ18O signifying the strongest hydrothermal alteration in both basalt and melted country rocks. The zone of alteration extends several tens of meters in either direction. Quartz in granite is minimally affected, while easier to alter groundmass, plagioclase and other minerals are lowered and display large Δ18OQz-mineral fractionations due to effects of fluid flow and hydrothermal alteration. Oxygen isotopic compositions of minerals in equilibrium at high-T (850 °C) are given on the right, signifying the starting point prior to the meteoric-hydrothermal alteration event.

Modeling

In Fig. 4 we present results of modeling porous fluid flow which produces hydrothermal alteration and δ18O depletion around a cooling dike, performed using the MUFITS software22. We assumed a magma temperature of 1140 °C, a dike thickness of 10 m, and we varied the duration of flow (1–10 years) (cf. 18–20]) as well as the porosity and permeability of water-saturated country rocks (assuming spatially and temporally uniform host rock properties). Searching these parameters, we found a good match between previous observations of the dike environment and a permeability of K = 10−13 m2 and a porosity of 3%, corresponding to microfracture permeability in the host granite.

Figure 4
figure 4

Numerical modeling of heat transfer and oxygen isotope exchange associated with a representative CRB feeder dike in water-saturated country rocks, see Figs. S2–5 in the Appendix for other results and movie files. Magma flow in the 10 m wide dike for 7 years is followed by cooling for 150 years, that matches data in Fig. 3 and the error envelope of U-He thermochronology modeling19, see also Fig. 5. Water is drawn from the surface, i.e. from the right side of the model. Hydrothermal flow in porous country rocks is induced and develops steep vertical flow features around the contact; transient vapor-water transitions at different times result in different stream functions and degrees of alteration at different depths and distances as heat advects and conducts. (a) Evolution of δ18O values of country rocks (upper panels), water (lower panels), and temperature at indicated times. Water is shifted up and rocks down in δ18O as a result of alteration. Figure is generated using Matlab version 2019a. https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/movie.html. (b) Final δ18O depletions in rocks plotted vs. distance upon completion of fluid flow and cooling of the system (thin solid curves) and measured δ18O profile (dashed lines, from left and right sides of Maxwell Lake feeder dike, see Fig. 3). There is a significant vertical difference in δ18O level of the final depletion vs depth. This is due to time-integrated fluid flow through each area of the country rocks. Sampled depths are shown by dashed horizontal lines in (a). (c) Observed δ18O depletions in rocks plotted vs distance for 2.2–2.4 Ga dikes in Karelia that interacted with -45‰ syn-glacial meteoric water (data from32). The Appendix and Fig. 5 present results of simulations in other initial and boundary conditions (profiles and movies), including duration of magma flow that ranges from 2 weeks to 7 years. Short magma flow durations result in a smaller magnitude of δ18O depletion. As the majority of CRB dikes are not feeders and have shorter magma flow, they exhibit smaller δ18O depletion (see Fig. 2).

Modeling was able to reproduce the overall width of the δ18O depletion zone which extends ~150 meters from the contact, including the oscillating δ18O values with distance from the dike documented in Fig. 3, which are explained by a transient vapor phase behavior near the contact. Immediately after dike intrusion, magma heats and drives ambient meteoric water, some of which is converted to steam, away from the contact. During active magma flow within the dike, this initial behavior transitions into a convection cell of heated groundwater in the vicinity of the dike (Fig. 4, movies in Appendix), with upwelling of hot water near the dike-rock interface and down flow which draws in fresh low-δ18O meteoric water in the far field. This convective flow with upward flow along the contact then persists for 105 years after dike intrusion. Where rock temperatures are high, isotope exchange with meteoric water takes place leading to significant depletion of host rocks in heavy oxygen isotopes, particularly in the feldspar crystals (Figs. 3, 4). The fluid flow is also affected by liquid water to steam phase transitions which happen at an intermediate distance from the dike contact, affecting time integrated fluid flow and details of δ18O vs distance relationships. Steam in shallow conditions carries less molar oxygen than heated water, affecting molar oxygen flux. Finally, upon cooling of basalt in the dike below brittle-ductile transition, heated meteoric waters will penetrate inward and flow upward, causing alteration of the basalt to low-δ18O values (Fig. 3), though this process is not included in our models.

The modeled convective cooling regime of the dike was matched with the temperature-distance profile constrained by Karlstrom et al.19, who performed a Bayesian Markov-Chain Monte Carlo inversion of U-Th-He zircon and apatite reset ages consisting of s>106 individual simulations for various parameter combinations to derive the 68% confidence intervals shown in Fig. 5. Given the large width of the thermal influence zone extending ~100 m, these researchers had to assume thermal conductivities larger than those for pure conduction. Our advection-diffusion modeling to match O-isotopic observations suggests that heated water convection rather than conduction dominated near-dike heat transport. Figures 45 compare hydrothermal modeling results with the measured O isotopic compositions.

Figure 5
figure 5

(a) Maximum temperature reached in simulations in convective runs (solid lines) vs identical conductive runs (dashed lines). Country rock permeability is 10−13 m2, porosity is 3% corresponding to an open fracture network. (b) comparison of simulations with T-distance profile (68% confidence intervals) from inversion of U-Th-He thermochronometric ages for zircon and apatite around the Maxwell Lake dike19, best matching 7 yr duration of magma flow in the dike.

We further observe that the models predict the overall width and magnitude of δ18O depletion around the dike on timescales of magma flow and subsequent cooling at a permeability in the 10−13 m2 range, which generates fluid flow rates of many meters per year. This is within the permeability observed for MORB (10−11 to 10−14 m228,). The model result also predicts something that is not measured in the field: a relationship between lowering of δ18O and distance from the dike that is variable with depth (Fig. 4). As the permeability in the model did not vary, this observation results from variable fluid fluxes undergoing water-vapor phase transition, and their time-integrated trajectories. Modeling provides a testable hypothesis to investigate δ18O variations over a 1 km vertical length of dike as well as the spatial extent of maximum depletion away from the dike, including its degree and isotopic sign changes. We consider the results of such modeling as both reassuring in that it mechanistically explains our observations, and in that it is possible to achieve the observed depletion of oxygen in and around the dikes on timescales of their cooling.

Published temperature-time histories in the vicinity of Maxwell Lake dike18,19,20 were based on an assumption of conductive heat transport in country rocks without hydrothermal effects, although the reset of He-apatite ages at greater distances than expected for conduction with normal thermal conductivity values (2–3 W/mC) was noticed19. Different parameterizations in the above models of dike heating and treatment of melting and release of latent heat largely agreed that heating of country rocks by introducing basalt occurred for around 1–7 years, raising the contact temperature to ~850–950 °C, enough to cause ~50% melting of granite at the contact. Upon cessation of the flow in the dike, the models predict that 0.6–0.7 years are required to cool both, the basalt and granitic partial melts near the contact to granite solidus (725 °C; Fig. S2). Conductive and convective cooling of the dikes are compared on Fig. 5a, demonstrating wider thermal influence on the country rocks when meteoric water circulation is involved. Thermal and hydrothermal effects associated with dikes with different duration of magma flow are further compared in the Supplementary Movies in the Appendix.

Hydrothermal alteration processes and modeling inferred for the Maxwell Lake Dike are likely applicable to the other studied, smaller dikes presented here (Figs. 1, 2). Their low-δ18O values demonstrate that ambient fluids entered the dikes after the dikes cooled to the brittle-ductile transition at around 400–500 °C and that hydrologic pressure injected low-δ18O water into hot rocks. Based on the modeling, fluid flow direction around the dike can be visualized in three stages: (1) flow away from the heating contact during intrusion, (2) upward parallel to the contact upon hydrological recharge, and (3) outward and into the dike upon it cooling below the brittle-ductile transition.

Discussion and Implications

Hydrothermal systems around cooling dikes in LIPs

We provide the first documentation of syn-plutonic hydrothermal alteration around a dike in the CRB. The pattern of decreasing alteration with distance from the intrusion is analogous to the two-dimensional “bull’s eye” patterns of hydrothermal alteration described for many larger intrusive systems around the world29,30. In all such systems, the center of the intrusion serves as a heat source which drives hydrothermal convection in the solidified outer intrusion and in the surrounding country rock. The central, hotter areas facilitate greater lowering of rock δ18O, because high temperatures produce lower Δ18Omineral-water fractionation factors (Appendix Fig. S4) and because they stay hot and active for longer (Fig. 4), allowing more complete equilibration. The hot center and melted contact zones are shifted closest to the altering low-δ18O meteoric water values. The existence of such hydrothermal systems around dikes in the CRB has also been inferred by Buchan et al.31 from changes in remanent magnetization of country rocks.

The Maxwell Lake dike is unusual compared to most other basaltic dikes because it is associated with a very large altered area (~100 m in diameter) relative to a fairly small (<10 m) intrusion, and because it was altered to lower δ18O values than most other dikes (Figs. 23). This is because, as a long-lived feeder, it drove a hotter and longer-lived hydrothermal system than other dikes that represent shorter-lived and less voluminous intrusive events. These long durations of activity imply very large magma volumes (associated Wapshilla Ridge flows are up to 5000 km3 or more and are probably almost uniquely associated with LIP activity3,15). The kind of pervasive low-δ18O alteration in and around a relatively small dike seen at Maxwell Lake and other dikes is therefore diagnostic of LIP activity in the geologic record, where dikes are commonly much thicker.

For example, the world’s greatest δ18O depletions (down to −27.8‰) are found in and around thick (10–80 m) dikes of 2.2–2.4 Ga age in Karelia, Russia and in the Scourie area of Scotland32,33. These studies suggest that these dikes are likely also feeders to voluminous surface flows, given the large spatial extent of hydrothermal alterations they caused. It also connects them directly to the 2.4–2.2 Ga LIP in the Baltic Shield33 that are also contemporaneous to the severe Snowball earth glaciations in the Paleoproterozoic with low δ18O surface waters down to −40‰. The oxygen isotope alteration pattern around basaltic dikes (found here) can thus serve to detect the presence of LIP-scale eruptive activity that is otherwise hidden, or eroded away especially in the Precambrian. It further identifies that these dikes had shallow emplacement even if they cut crystalline basement. We (and other researchers) previously were unable to explain the width of δ18O depletions in Karelia given that the width of even the thickest of the dikes in the Khitostrov area (~80 m) are incapable to such an extensive δ18O change unless they are feeders.

Our work may find further support in explaining extreme hydrothermal events in other, and especially submarine LIPs. For example, Beier et al.34 recently documented that ~10 Ma submarine Azores Plateau in the Central Northern Atlantic Province exhibit features of extreme hydrothermal alteration during submarine igneous plateau formation, which drastically changed the compositions of the igneous crust.

Regional low-δ18O crust modification and connection to low-δ18O rhyolite production

Our observation that syn-CRB dikes have induced “self-inflicted” hydrothermal alteration is important to understand the degree of lowering of δ18O in the upper crust in volcanically active areas, and by extension in submarine LIP and MORB environments as well34. Rifting and closely-spaced heat sources such as dikes and sills likely lead to significant hydrothermal alteration similar to what we document in this work. Generally, this study shows that LIP generate abundant meteoric hydrothermal episodes and wide-spread hydrothermal modification of the upper crust, or shallow submarine crust. Contact-hydrothermal δ18O depletion of rocks around dikes is 500–600 km3, which scaled to the CRB footprint constitutes 31,000 km3 of low-δ18O rocks. Collectively, these volumes of crustal δ18O depletion are sufficient to explain the abundant low-δ18O magmas in eastern Oregon and western Idaho10,11,35,36, where the most extension and diking takes place. Upon re-melting and assimilation during subsequent phases of magmatism, these hydrothermally altered rocks may become low-δ18O magmas especially if magmas generally follow the same already established magma plumbing systems, in which rocks are additionally preheated to ease assimilation efficiency. Such a scenario seems to have occurred to the south of the Maxwell Lake dike at the Oregon-Idaho graben (Fig. 1), where syn-volcanic normal faults appear to have concentrated basalt diking and therefore the production of low-δ18O magmas through this multi-step process11. The total volume of low-δ18O magmas formed during collision of the CRB plume with the North American plate has not yet been established as exposures are lacking. However, it is likely that the ~10,000 km3 of low-δ18O rhyolites in the post-CRB Snake River Plain hotspot track35,36 were produced by this process, especially if a feeder dike system was repeatedly reactivated.

Thermogenic gas production and limited climate impact of the CRBs

If we assume that the small non-eruptive dikes shown in Fig. 2 all have induced thermal metamorphism with various associated aspects of hydrothermal alteration just several diameters of the dike around the dikes themselves (e.g. Fig. 5), then the extent of hydrothermal alteration in the CRB province is estimated to affect 500–600 km3 shallow continental crust. This estimate is based on the cumulative length of dikes, assuming that each feeder dike affected country rocks 150 meters in each direction from the contacts, and that dead-end dikes just affected country rocks by 30 meters at average dike thickness of 8 m with vertical extent of 3 km16.

We choose the dike number density exposed in the Chief Joseph Dike Swarm in the Wallowa Batholith and assumed that dikes are intruded in metasedimentary (15%), volcanic (53%) and plutonic (32%) igneous crust in proportions based on Morriss et al.16. These authors independently estimated that up to 10–100 km3 of metasediments were affected by the heat of the dikes. The total volume of CRB Group basalt is estimated at 210,000 km337. Using these, we obtain ~600 km3 of rocks affected by hydrothermal alteration, and assuming that 2 wt% of organic matter is present on average in metasedimentary country rocks, along with a high-end estimate of 0.5 wt% in the dominant plutonic and volcanic country rocks, volatilization of this as CO2 will release only 18 Gt of greenhouse CO2 gas. This is a small number compared to the 1000–3000 Gt of CO2 released by the 210,000 km3 of CRB magmas themselves (assuming 0.2–0.5 wt% CO238). Even if the dike-affected area is scaled to the 210,000 km2 footprint of CRB, the thermal and hydrothermal release of greenhouse gases due to oxidation of soil and country rock organics will constitute only about a third of magmatic CO2 release. The lack of known extinction pulses associated with CRBs8, which intruded primarily through and on top of the volcanic and plutonic basements, as opposed to the Siberian Traps and Karoo6,7, which erupted into organics-rich sedimentary rocks, may be related to this small initial amount of organics available for volatilization by the CRB, despite our observation of effects of hydrothermal metamorphism.