International audienceOver the course of Earth’s history, marine sulfate concentrations have been increasing in response to long-term atmospheric oxygenation. In contrast to modern oceans, where abundant sulfate precipitates in hot oceanic crust as anhydrite, Precambrian oceans contained much less (~0–10 mM) sulfate, so that submarine hydrothermal systems were comparatively poor in anhydrite. As a step towards exploring the role of chemical evolution of seawater solutes, we investigate the reaction between basalt and seawater that took place at the ca. 2.43–2.41 Ga Vetreny Belt (Karelia craton, NW Russia) using fluid inclusion and multi-isotope measurements complemented by reactive transport and static aqueous-mineral equilibrium calculatio...