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Phosphate remobilization from banded iron formations during metamorphic mineral transformations
Chemical Geology
  • Manuel Schad, University of Tuebingen
  • Maximilian Halama, University of Tuebingen
  • Natalia Jakus, University of Tuebingen
  • Leslie J. Robbins, University of Alberta
  • Tyler J. Warchola, University of Alberta
  • Julian Tejada, University of Applied Forest Sciences Rottenburg
  • Rainer Kirchhof, University of Applied Forest Sciences Rottenburg
  • Stefan V. Lalonde, CNRS-UMR6538 Laboratoire Domaines Océaniques
  • Elizabeth D. Swanner, Iowa State University
  • Noah J. Planavsky, Yale University
  • Harald Thorwarth, University of Applied Forest Sciences Rottenburg
  • Muammar Mansor, University of Tuebingen
  • Kurt O. Konhauser, University of Alberta
  • Andreas Kappler, University of Tuebingen
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Accepted Manuscript
Publication Date
12-5-2021
DOI
10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120489
Abstract

Ratios of phosphorous (P) to iron (Fe) in Precambrian banded iron formations (BIFs) have previously been used to estimate dissolved seawater phosphate concentrations in the ancient oceans. Such studies rely on an assumed composition of the primary iron minerals, the concentrations of the major ions in seawater, and empirical partitioning coefficients for phosphate sorption to Fe(III) (oxyhydr)oxides. There is limited data, however, regarding the post-depositional stability of phosphate associated with presumed primary BIF iron minerals, such as ferrihydrite under low-grade metamorphic temperature and pressure conditions. Here we experimentally formed ferrihydrite in the presence of silica, which was abundant in the Precambrian oceans, and then incubated it at 170°C and 1.2 kbar in the presence or absence of organic carbon (Corg; either glucose or microbial biomass) as a proxy for ancient planktonic biomass. We found that the post-metamorphic mineral assemblage resulting from thermochemical Fe(III) reduction of Si-doped ferrihydrite depended on Corg reactivity: In the presence of highly reactive glucose, siderite, magnetite, and vivianite were formed, with less than 1.2 mol.% of phosphate (0.5 M NaCl extractable) being mobilized. In contrast, the reaction of Si-doped ferrihydrite with less reactive microbial biomass resulted in the formation of hematite and siderite, but not vivianite, and approximately 10 mol.% of phosphate was remobilized into the pore fluids. Collectively, our data suggest that the fidelity with which BIFs record ancient oceanic phosphate concentrations depends on the mineralogy and diagenetic history of individual BIFs but should be reliable within 10%.

Comments

This is a manuscript of an article published as Schad, Manuel, Maximilian Halama, Natalia Jakus, Leslie J. Robbins, Tyler J. Warchola, Julian Tejada, Rainer Kirchhof et al. "Phosphate remobilization from banded iron formations during metamorphic mineral transformations." Chemical Geology 584 (2021): 120489. doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120489. Posted with permission.

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International
Copyright Owner
Elsevier B.V.
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Manuel Schad, Maximilian Halama, Natalia Jakus, Leslie J. Robbins, et al.. "Phosphate remobilization from banded iron formations during metamorphic mineral transformations" Chemical Geology Vol. 584 (2021) p. 120489
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/elizabeth_swanner/22/