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Silicate coprecipitation reduces green rust crystal size and limits dissolution-precipitation during air oxidation Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-10-29 Aaron R. Betts, Matthew H. H. Fischel, Anna Evers, Ryan Tappero, Donald L. Sparks
Green rusts (GR) are mixed-valence iron (Fe) hydroxides which form in reducing redox environments like riparian and wetland soils and shallow groundwater. In these environments, silicon (Si) can influence Fe oxides’ chemical and physical properties but its role in GR formation and subsequent oxidative transformation have not been studied starting at initial nucleation. Green rust sulfate [GR(SO4)]
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Development of the Arabian-Nubian Shield along the Marsa Alam-Idfu transect, Central-Eastern Desert, Egypt: geochemical implementation of zircon U-Pb geochronology Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-10-28 Sherif Mansour, Noriko Hasebe, Kamal Abdelrahman, Mohammed S. Fnais, Mohamed A. Gharib, Rabiou Habou, Akihiro Tamura
The magmatic complex along the Marsa Alam-Idfu transect, Central-Eastern Desert of Egypt, represents the northern segment of the Arabian–Nubian Shield (ANS), which developed within the framework of the East African Orogen. The basement rocks of the Arabian-Nubian Shield have been developed through three distinct phases of magmatic activity: the island-arc, the syn-orogenic, and the post-orogenic phases
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Probing atomic-scale processes at the ferrihydrite-water interface with reactive molecular dynamics Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-10-26 Ardalan Hayatifar, Simon Gravelle, Beatriz D. Moreno, Valerie A. Schoepfer, Matthew B. J. Lindsay
Interfacial processes involving metal (oxyhydr)oxide phases are important for the mobility and bioavailability of nutrients and contaminants in soils, sediments, and water. Consequently, these processes influence ecosystem health and functioning, and have shaped the biological and environmental co-evolution of Earth over geologic time. Here we employ reactive molecular dynamics simulations, supported
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Effect of Mn2+ concentration on the growth of δ-MnO2 crystals under acidic conditions Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-28 Liyan Bi, Haoran Hu, Lei Wang, Zuran Li, Fangdong Zhan, Yongmei He, Yanqun Zu, Yuan Li, Xinran Liang
δ-MnO2 is an important component of environmental minerals and is among the strongest sorbents and oxidants. The crystalline morphology of δ-MnO2 is one of the key factors affecting its reactivity. In this work, δ-MnO2 was initially synthesized and placed in an acidic environment to react with Mn2+ and undergo a crystalline transformation. During the transformation of crystalline δ-MnO2, kinetic sampling
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Water quality assessment of Upper Ganga and Yamuna river systems during COVID-19 pandemic-induced lockdown: imprints of river rejuvenation Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-28 Sameer K. Tiwari, Jairam Singh Yadav, Kalachand Sain, Santosh K. Rai, Aditya Kharya, Vinit Kumar, Pratap Chandra Sethy
Clean river water is an essential and life-sustaining asset for all living organisms. The upper Ganga and Yamuna river system has shown signs of rejuvenation and tremendous improvement in the water quality following the nationwide lockdown due to the coronavirus pandemic. All the industrial and commercial activity was shut down, and there was negligible wastewater discharge from the industries. This
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Investigation of hydrochemical characteristic, water quality and associated health risks of metals and metalloids in water resources in the vicinity of Akamkpa quarry district, southeastern, Nigeria Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 George E. Ikpi, Therese N. Nganje, Aniekan Edet, Christopher I. Adamu, Godswill A. Eyong
Quarrying of rock aggregates generates produced water that, if not handled properly will be a source of pollution for nearby water bodies, thus affecting the chemistry of the water. This study examined the chemistry, impact of quarrying activities on water resources and the health consequences/risks posed by ingestion of the water by humans in the Akamkpa quarry region in southeastern Nigeria. Thirty
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Hydrothermal alteration processes in monzogranite: a case study from the Eastern Desert of Egypt: implications from remote sensing, geochemistry and mineralogy Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Amira M. El Tohamy
The South Eastern Desert (SED) of Egypt is one of the most promising areas in Egypt; it is widely explored for exploring the rare earth elements (REEs) and uranium-bearing ores. It is a main part of the Arabian-Nubian Shield (ANS). Therefore, the present study concerns with Sikait-Nugrus area as one of the most prolific sites in this region. The study provides a detailed geological, structural, and
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Prebiotic thiol-catalyzed thioamide bond formation Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-08-05 Andrew S. Hyde, Christopher H. House
Thioamide bonds are important intermediates in prebiotic chemistry. In cyanosulfidic prebiotic chemistry, they serve as crucial intermediates in the pathways that lead to the formation of many important biomolecules (e.g., amino acids). They can also serve as purine and pyrimidine precursors, the two classes of heterocycle employed in genetic molecules. Despite their importance, the formation of thioamide
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Element mobility during basalt-water-CO2 interaction: observations in natural systems vs. laboratory experiments and implication for carbon storage Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-05-16 Pierangelo Romano, Lorenzo Brusca, Marcello Liotta
Today, carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere is the most ambitious challenge to mitigate climate changes. Basalt rocks are abundant on the Earth’s surface (≈ 10%) and very abundant in the ocean floors and subaerial environments. Glassy matrix and minerals constituting these rocks contain metals (Ca2+, Mg2+, Fe2+) that can react with carbonic acid to form metal carbonates (CaCO3, MgO3 and FeCO3)
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A comparative study of the risk assessment and heavy metal contamination of coastal sediments in the Red sea, Egypt, between the cities of El-Quseir and Safaga Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-05-03 Ahmed R. Elgendy, Abd El Mohsen S. El Daba, Mohamed A. El-Sawy, Ahmed E. Alprol, Ghada Y. Zaghloul
This study aimed to assess the influence of pollution on the quality of sediments and the risks associated with El-Qusier and Safaga Cities, Red Sea, Egypt, during 2021, divided into four sectors, using multiple pollution indices. To achieve that, we evaluated the metal pollution index (MPI), contamination factor (Cf), pollution load index (PLI), contamination security index (CSI), and anthropogenicity
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Geochemical dispersion of gold-bearing quartz veins in the Wadi Abu Khusheiba area in Southern Jordan Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-03-02 Mariam Mosleh, Jasmi Hafiz Abdul Aziz, Muhammad Hatta Roselee, Ahmed Al-Shorman, Mahmoud Al Tamimi, Abdelkarim Alsoudi
This study delves into the geochemical dispersion of gold-bearing quartz veins in the Wadi Abu Khusheiba area, southern Jordan, with a focus on uncovering the complex patterns of mineralization and their geological significance. Employing an in-depth geochemical analysis of 24 rock samples from the region, we identified that these samples are predominantly hosted by oversaturated rhyolitic rocks, characterized
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Impact of some heavy metal accumulation in different organs on fish quality from Bardawil Lake and human health risks assessment Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2024-01-11 Ghada Y. Zaghloul, Hoda A. Eissa, Amira Y. Zaghloul, Mahmoud S. Kelany, Mohamed A. Hamed, Khalid M. El Moselhy
Bardawil Lake is a unique aquatic ecosystem that provides a habitat for various fish and other marine organisms. This study aimed to analyze the quality of fish species to prove that this lake is free of pollution, not other Egyptian lakes, due to the accumulation of some heavy metals (Cd, Pb, Cu, and Zn) in various tissues of fish species that were caught from this lake. Thirty-five fish samples were
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Genetic implications of Th/U, Th/K, and U/K ratios for U mineralizations: A case study from El-Missikat and El-Erediya shear zones, Eastern Desert, Egypt Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2023-10-17 Mahmoud Abdel-Hakeem, Mohamed El-Tahir, Ehab Abu Zeid, Hassan Rageh
The current work is an attempt to reveal the possible utilization of the radiometric measurements to build-up a complete genetic scenario for magmatic, hydrothermal, and supergene uranium mineralization. For this purpose, ground gamma-ray survey was performed through the exploratory tunnels dug perpendicular to El-Missikat and El-Erediya shear zones, the Central Eastern Desert of Egypt. Contents of
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Eu(III) and Am(III) adsorption on aluminum (hydr)oxide minerals: surface complexation modeling Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2023-06-20 Anshuman Satpathy, Amy E. Hixon
Americium is a highly radioactive actinide element found in used nuclear fuel. Its adsorption on aluminum (hydr)oxide minerals is important to study for at least two reasons: (i) aluminum (hydr)oxide minerals are ubiquitous in the subsurface environment and (ii) bentonite clays, which are proposed engineered barriers for the geologic disposal of used nuclear fuel, have the same ≡AlOH sites as aluminum
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Accelerated mineral bio-carbonation of coarse residue kimberlite material by inoculation with photosynthetic microbial mats Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2023-06-16 Thomas Ray Jones, Jordan Poitras, Emma Gagen, David John Paterson, Gordon Southam
Microbiological weathering of coarse residue deposit (CRD) kimberlite produced by the Venetia Diamond Mine, Limpopo, South Africa enhanced mineral carbonation relative to untreated material. Cultures of photosynthetically enriched biofilm produced maximal carbonation conditions when mixed with kimberlite and incubated under near surface conditions. Interestingly, mineral carbonation also occurred in
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Effect of Ni2+, Zn2+, and Co2+ on green rust transformation to magnetite Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2022-12-29 Farr, Orion, Elzinga, Evert J., Yee, Nathan
In this study, we investigated Ni2+, Zn2+, and Co2+ mineralogical incorporation and its effect on green rust transformation to magnetite. Mineral transformation experiments were conducted by heating green rust suspensions at 85 °C in the presence of Ni2+, Zn2+, or Co2+ under strict anoxic conditions. Transmission electron microscopy and powder X-ray diffraction showed the conversion of hexagonal green
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Geochemistry and microbiology of tropical serpentine soils in the Santa Elena Ophiolite, a landscape-biogeographical approach Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2022-09-27 Solano-Arguedas, Agustín F., Boothman, Christopher, Newsome, Laura, Pattrick, Richard A. D., Arguedas-Quesada, Daniel, Robinson, Clare H., Lloyd, Jonathan R.
The Santa Elena Ophiolite is a well-studied ultramafic system in Costa Rica mainly comprised of peridotites. Here, tropical climatic conditions promote active laterite formation processes, but the biogeochemistry of the resulting serpentine soils is still poorly understood. The aim of this study was to characterize the soil geochemical composition and microbial community of contrasting landscapes in
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Improved volume variable cluster model method for crystal-lattice optimization: effect on isotope fractionation factor Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2022-05-22 Wang, Yan-Fang, Ji, Xin-Yue, Xing, Le-Cai, Wang, Peng-Dong, Liu, Jian, Zhang, Tian-Di, Zhao, Hao-Nan, He, Hong-Tao
The isotopic fractionation factor and element partition coefficient can be calculated only after the geometric optimization of the molecular clusters is completed. Optimization directly affects the accuracy of some parameters, such as the average bond length, molecular volume, harmonic vibrational frequency, and other thermodynamic parameters. Here, we used the improved volume variable cluster model
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A single column separation method for barium isotope analysis of geologic and hydrologic materials with complex matrices Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2021-08-11 Matecha, R. M., Capo, R. C., Stewart, B. W., Thompson, R. L., Hakala, J. A.
The increasing significance of barium (Ba) in environmental and geologic research in recent years has led to interest in the application of the Ba isotopic composition as a tracer for natural materials with complex matrices. Most Ba isotope measurement techniques require separation of Ba from the rest of sample prior to analysis. This paper presents a method using readily available materials and disposable
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A density functional theory study of Fe(II)/Fe(III) distribution in single layer green rust: a cluster approach Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2021-06-11 Weichao Sun, Dominique J. Tobler, Martin P. Andersson
Green rust (GR) is a potentially important compound for the reduction of heavy metal and organic pollutants in subsurface environment because of its high Fe(II) content, but many details of the actual reaction mechanism are lacking. The reductive capacity distribution within GR is a key to understand how and where the redox reaction occurs and computational chemistry can provide more details about
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Influences on tidal channel and aquaculture shrimp pond water chemical composition in Southwest Bangladesh Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-28 Matthew Dietrich, John C. Ayers
Detailed geochemical studies of both major and minor elements in Bangladesh surface waters are sparse, particularly in shrimp aquaculture pond environments. Therefore, water samples from shrimp aquaculture ponds and tidal channels were collected in high precipitation (July) and low precipitation (May) months from 2018–2019 in Southwest Bangladesh and analyzed for complete water chemistry. Selenium
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Dissolution and solubility of calcite-rhodochrosite solid solutions [(Ca1-xMnx)CO3] at 25 °C Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2021-05-26 Yinian Zhu, Peijie Nong, Nan Mo, Zongqiang Zhu, Huan Deng, Shen Tang, Hongqu Yang, Lihao Zhang, Xingxing Wang
A complete series of calcite-rhodochrosite solid solutions [(Ca1-xMnx)CO3] are prepared, and their dissolution processes in various water samples are experimentally investigated. The crystal morphologies of the solid solutions vary from blocky spherical crystal aggregates to smaller spheres with an increasing incorporation of Mn in the solids. Regarding dissolution in N2-degassed water, air-saturated
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Trace element partitioning between pyrochlore, microlite, fersmite and silicate melts. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-08-24 Stephan Klemme,Jasper Berndt
We present experimentally determined trace element partition coefficients (D) between pyrochlore-group minerals (Ca2(Nb,Ta)2O6(O,F)), Ca fersmite (CaNb2O6), and silicate melts. Our data indicate that pyrochlores and fersmite are able to strongly fractionate trace elements during the evolution of SiO2-undersaturated magmas. Pyrochlore efficiently fractionates Zr and Hf from Nb and Ta, with DZr and DHf
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Immobilization of Cr(VI) by sulphate green rust and sulphidized nanoscale zerovalent iron in sand media: batch and column studies. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-08-14 Flavia Digiacomo,Dominique J Tobler,Thomas Held,Thomas Neumann
Chromate, Cr(VI), contamination in soil and groundwater poses serious threat to living organisms and environmental health worldwide. Sulphate green rust (GRSO4), a naturally occurring mixed-valent iron layered double hydroxide has shown to be highly effective in the reduction of Cr(VI) to poorly soluble Cr(III), giving promise for its use as reactant for in situ remedial applications. However, little
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Correction to: Constraining the carbonate system in soils via testing the internal consistency of pH, pCO2 and alkalinity measurements. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Sima Bargrizan,Ronald J Smernik,Luke M Mosley
The original version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake. The presentation of Fig. 4 was incorrect. That is, in Fig. 4, the bottom graph in the figure should be removed.
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Frontiers and advances in environmental soil chemistry: a special issue in honor of Prof. Donald L. Sparks. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-04-17 Young-Shin Jun,Mengqiang Zhu,Derek Peak
Professor Donald Sparks This Special Issue of Geochemical Transactions is dedicated to Professor Donald L. Sparks, the S. Hallock du Pont Chair in the Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, and the Director of the Delaware Environmental Institute, at the University of Delaware (UD), in celebration and honor of his life-long research interests and achievements in environmental soil chemistry. Dr. Sparks
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A golden period for environmental soil chemistry. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Donald L Sparks
In many respects, the field of environmental soil chemistry has never been more important than today. Many of the critical environmental issues we face globally are linked to the changing climate, which is having profound impacts on the chemistry of soils. We have a poor understanding of how climate impacts not only chemical, but also physical, biological, and mineralogical properties and processes
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Constraining the carbonate system in soils via testing the internal consistency of pH, pCO2 and alkalinity measurements. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-03-30 Sima Bargrizan,Ronald J Smernik,Luke M Mosley
Inorganic carbon exists in various dissolved, gaseous and solid phase forms in natural waters and soils. It is important to accurately measure and model these forms to understand system responses to global climate change. The carbonate system can, in theory, be fully constrained and modelled by measuring at least two of out of the following four parameters: partial pressure (pCO2), total alkalinity
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Improvement of quantitative solution 31P NMR analysis of soil organic P: a study of spin–lattice relaxation responding to paramagnetic ions Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-02-17 Yunbin Jiang, Fengmin Zhang, Chao Ren, Wei Li
Solution 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has been widely applied to analyze the speciation of soil organic P; however, this time-consuming technique suffers from a low analytical efficiency, because of the lack of fundamental information such as the spin–lattice relaxation (T1) of 31P nucleus for model P compounds. In this study, we for the first time determined the T1 values of twelve
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Effects of metal cation substitution on hexavalent chromium reduction by green rust. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-02-14 Andrew N Thomas,Elisabeth Eiche,Jörg Göttlicher,Ralph Steininger,Liane G Benning,Helen M Freeman,Dominique J Tobler,Marco Mangayayam,Knud Dideriksen,Thomas Neumann
Chromium contamination is a serious environmental issue in areas affected by leather tanning and metal plating, and green rust sulfate has been tested extensively as a potential material for in situ chemical reduction of hexavalent chromium in groundwater. Reported products and mechanisms for the reaction have varied, most likely because of green rust's layered structure, as reduction at outer and
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Discrimination of topsoil environments in a karst landscape: an outcome of a geochemical mapping campaign Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2020-01-04 Ozren Hasan, Slobodan Miko, Nikolina Ilijanić, Dea Brunović, Željko Dedić, Martina Šparica Miko, Zoran Peh
The study presented in this work emerged as a result of a multiyear regional geochemical survey based on low-density topsoil sampling and the ensuing geochemical atlas of Croatia. This study focuses on the Dinaric part of Croatia to expound the underlying mechanisms controlling the mobilities and variations in distribution of potentially harmful elements as observed from different environmental angles
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Intermobility of barium, strontium, and lead in chloride and sulfate leach solutions. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2019-09-05 Mark Rollog,Nigel J Cook,Paul Guagliardo,Kathy Ehrig,Sarah E Gilbert,Matt Kilburn
Production of radionuclide-free copper concentrates is dependent on understanding and controlling the deportment of daughter radionuclides (RNs) produced from 238U decay, specifically 226Ra, 210Pb, and 210Po. Sulfuric acid leaching is currently employed in the Olympic Dam processing plant (South Australia) to remove U and fluorine from copper concentrates prior to smelting but does not adequately remove
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The effect of pH and ionic strength on the adsorption of glyphosate onto ferrihydrite. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2019-05-24 Rodrigo C Pereira,Pedro R Anizelli,Eduardo Di Mauro,Daniel F Valezi,Antonio Carlos S da Costa,Cássia Thaïs B V Zaia,Dimas A M Zaia
Although, glyphosate (N-(phosphonomethyl) glycine) is one of the most widely used herbicides in the world, its interaction with poorly crystalline iron oxides, such as ferrihydrite, is not well studied. In this research, we examined the adsorption of glyphosate onto ferrihydrite using infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), adsorption kinetic models and adsorption
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Reductive dissolution of As(V)-bearing Fe(III)-precipitates formed by Fe(II) oxidation in aqueous solutions. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2019-03-22 Andreas Voegelin,Anna-Caterina Senn,Ralf Kaegi,Stephan J Hug
Iron(III)-precipitates formed by the oxidation of dissolved Fe(II) are important sorbents for major and trace elements in aquatic and terrestrial systems. Their reductive dissolution in turn may result in the release of associated elements. We examined the reductive dissolution kinetics of an environmentally relevant set of Fe(II)-derived arsenate-containing Fe(III)-precipitates whose structure as
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The formation of spinel-group minerals in contaminated soils: the sequestration of metal(loid)s by unexpected incidental nanoparticles. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2019-03-13 Michael Schindler,Haley Mantha,Michael F Hochella
Mineralogical studies of contaminated soils affected by smelter emission and dust from mining activities indicate that minerals of the spinel group are one of the common hosts of metal-bearing contaminants. Spinel group minerals typically originate from high temperature processes, but an increasing number of studies indicate that metal-bearing spinel group minerals can also form under ambient Earth
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Onboard experiment investigating metal leaching of fresh hydrothermal sulfide cores into seawater. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-12-06 Shigeshi Fuchida,Jun-Ichiro Ishibashi,Kazuhiko Shimada,Tatsuo Nozaki,Hidenori Kumagai,Masanobu Kawachi,Yoshitaka Matsushita,Hiroshi Koshikawa
We observed the initial release rate of metals from four fresh (i.e., without long time exposure to the atmosphere) hydrothermal sulfide cores into artificial seawater. The sulfide samples were collected by seafloor drilling from the Okinawa Trough by D/V Chikyu, powdered under inert gas, and immediately subjected to onboard metal-leaching experiments at different temperatures (5 °C and 20 °C), and
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Natural speciation of nickel at the micrometer scale in serpentine (ultramafic) topsoils using microfocused X-ray fluorescence, diffraction, and absorption. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-08-14 Matthew G Siebecker,Rufus L Chaney,Donald L Sparks
Serpentine soils and ultramafic laterites develop over ultramafic bedrock and are important geological materials from environmental, geochemical, and industrial standpoints. They have naturally elevated concentrations of trace metals, such as Ni, Cr, and Co, and also high levels of Fe and Mg. Minerals host these trace metals and influence metal mobility. Ni in particular is an important trace metal
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Adsorption of copper (II) on mesoporous silica: the effect of nano-scale confinement. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-06-26 Andrew W Knight,Austen B Tigges,Anastasia G Ilgen
Nano-scale spatial confinement can alter chemistry at mineral-water interfaces. These nano-scale confinement effects can lead to anomalous fate and transport behavior of aqueous metal species. When a fluid resides in a nanoporous environments (pore size under 100 nm), the observed density, surface tension, and dielectric constant diverge from those measured in the bulk. To evaluate the impact of nano-scale
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Catalytic oxidation of arsenite and reaction pathways on the surface of CuO nanoparticles at a wide range of pHs. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-06-22 Lingqun Zeng,Biao Wan,Rixiang Huang,Yupeng Yan,Xiaoming Wang,Wenfeng Tan,Fan Liu,Xionghan Feng
Recently, the wide application of CuO nanoparticles (NPs) in engineering field inevitably leads to its release into various geologic settings, which has aroused great concern about the geochemical behaviors of CuO NPs due to its high surface reactivity and impact on the fate of co-existing contaminants. However, the redox transformation of pollutants mediated by CuO NPs and the underlying mechanism
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Regional geochemical baseline concentration of potentially toxic trace metals in the mineralized Lom Basin, East Cameroon: a tool for contamination assessment. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-05-02 Mumbfu Ernestine Mimba,Takeshi Ohba,Salomon César Nguemhe Fils,Melvin Tamnta Nforba,Nozomi Numanami,Tasin Godlove Bafon,Festus Tongwa Aka,Cheo Emmanuel Suh
The distribution of trace metals in active stream sediments from the mineralized Lom Basin has been evaluated. Fifty-five bottom sediments were collected and the mineralogical composition of six pulverized samples determined by XRD. The fine fraction (< 150 µm) was subjected to total digestion (HClO4 + HF + HCl) and analyzed for trace metals using a combination of ICP-MS and AAS analytical methods
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Review of interactions between phosphorus and arsenic in soils from four case studies. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-04-02 Daniel G Strawn
Arsenic is a non-essential element that poses risks in many environments, including soil, groundwater, and surface water. Insights into the environmental biogeochemistry of As can be gained by comparing As and P reaction processes. Arsenic and P are chemical analogues, and it is proposed that they have similar chemical behaviors in environmental systems. However some chemical properties of As and P
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Competitive sorption of Ni and Zn at the aluminum oxide/water interface: an XAFS study. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-03-27 Wenxian Gou,Matthew G Siebecker,Zimeng Wang,Wei Li
Trace metals (e.g. Ni, Zn) leached from industrial and agricultural processes are often simultaneously present in contaminated soils and sediments. Their mobility, bioavailability, and ecotoxicity are affected by sorption and cosorption at mineral/solution interfaces. Cosorption of trace metals has been investigated at the macroscopic level, but there is not a clear understanding of the molecular-scale
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Density functional theory modeling of chromate adsorption onto ferrihydrite nanoparticles. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-03-01 James D Kubicki,Nadine Kabengi,Maria Chrysochoou,Nefeli Bompoti
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed on a model of a ferrihydrite nanoparticle interacting with chromate ([Formula: see text]) in water. Two configurations each of monodentate and bidentate adsorbed chromate as well as an outer-sphere and a dissolved bichromate ([Formula: see text]) were simulated. In addition to the 3-D periodic planewave DFT models, molecular clusters were
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Characterizing the phosphorus forms extracted from soil by the Mehlich III soil test. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-02-21 Barbara J Cade-Menun,Kyle R Elkin,Corey W Liu,Ray B Bryant,Peter J A Kleinman,Philip A Moore
Phosphorus (P) can limit crop production in many soils, and soil testing is used to guide fertilizer recommendations. The Mehlich III (M3) soil test is widely used in North America, followed by colorimetric analysis for P, or by inductively coupled plasma-based spectrometry (ICP) for P and cations. However, differences have been observed in M3 P concentrations measured by these methods. Using 31P nuclear
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Impacts of hydrous manganese oxide on the retention and lability of dissolved organic matter. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-02-13 Jason W Stuckey,Christopher Goodwin,Jian Wang,Louis A Kaplan,Prian Vidal-Esquivel,Thomas P Beebe,Donald L Sparks
Minerals constitute a primary ecosystem control on organic C decomposition in soils, and therefore on greenhouse gas fluxes to the atmosphere. Secondary minerals, in particular, Fe and Al (oxyhydr)oxides-collectively referred to as "oxides" hereafter-are prominent protectors of organic C against microbial decomposition through sorption and complexation reactions. However, the impacts of Mn oxides on
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Wien effect of Cd/Zn on soil clay fraction and their interaction. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-02-13 Tingting Fan,Chengbao Li,Juan Gao,Dongmei Zhou,Marcelo Eduardo Alves,Yujun Wang
BACKGROUND The coexistence of Cd2+ and Zn2+ ions in nature has a significant influence on their environmental behaviors in soils and bioavailability for plants. While many studies have been done on the mutual toxicity of Cd2+ and Zn2+, few studies can be found in the literature focused on the interaction of Cd2+ and Zn2+ on soil clay fractions especially in terms of energy relationship. RESULTS The
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The synergistic effect of calcium on organic carbon sequestration to ferrihydrite. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-02-03 Tyler D Sowers,Jason W Stuckey,Donald L Sparks
Sequestration of organic carbon (OC) in environmental systems is critical to mitigating climate change. Organo-mineral associations, especially those with iron (Fe) oxides, drive the chemistry of OC sequestration and stability in soils. Short-range-ordered Fe oxides, such as ferrihydrite, demonstrate a high affinity for OC in binary systems. Calcium commonly co-associates with OC and Fe oxides in soils
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Effects of humic substances on Fe(II) sorption onto aluminum oxide and clay. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-01-25 Ying Zhu,Jingjing Liu,Omanjana Goswami,Ashaki A Rouff,Evert J Elzinga
We studied the effects of humic substances (HS) on the sorption of Fe(II) onto Al-oxide and clay sorbents at pH 7.5 with a combination of batch kinetic experiments and synchrotron Fe K-edge EXAFS analyses. Fe(II) sorption was monitored over the course of 4 months in anoxic clay and Al-oxide suspensions amended with variable HS types (humic acid, HA; or fulvic acid, FA) and levels (0, 1, and 4 wt%)
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A geochemical view into continental palaeotemperatures of the end-Permian using oxygen and hydrogen isotope composition of secondary silica in chert rubble breccia: Kaibab Formation, Grand Canyon (USA). Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-01-16 Ray Kenny
The upper carbonate member of the Kaibab Formation in northern Arizona (USA) was subaerially exposed during the end Permian and contains fractured and zoned chert rubble lag deposits typical of karst topography. The karst chert rubble has secondary (authigenic) silica precipitates suitable for estimating continental weathering temperatures during the end Permian karst event. New oxygen and hydrogen
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Chemical speciation and fate of tripolyphosphate after application to a calcareous soil. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2018-01-08 Jordan G Hamilton,Jay Grosskleg,David Hilger,Kris Bradshaw,Trevor Carlson,Steven D Siciliano,Derek Peak
Adsorption and precipitation reactions often dictate the availability of phosphorus in soil environments. Tripolyphosphate (TPP) is considered a form of slow release P fertilizer in P limited soils, however, investigations of the chemical fate of TPP in soils are limited. It has been proposed that TPP rapidly hydrolyzes in the soil solution before adsorbing or precipitating with soil surfaces, but
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Fe(II) reduction of pyrolusite (β-MnO2) and secondary mineral evolution. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2017-12-05 Michael V Schaefer,Robert M Handler,Michelle M Scherer
Iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) are the two most common redox-active elements in the Earth's crust and are well known to influence mineral formation and dissolution, trace metal sequestration, and contaminant transformations in soils and sediments. Here, we characterized the reaction of aqueous Fe(II) with pyrolusite (β-MnO2) using electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, aqueous Fe and Mn analyses, and
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Interactions between magnetite and humic substances: redox reactions and dissolution processes. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2017-10-19 Anneli Sundman,James M Byrne,Iris Bauer,Nicolas Menguy,Andreas Kappler
Humic substances (HS) are redox-active compounds that are ubiquitous in the environment and can serve as electron shuttles during microbial Fe(III) reduction thus reducing a variety of Fe(III) minerals. However, not much is known about redox reactions between HS and the mixed-valent mineral magnetite (Fe3O4) that can potentially lead to changes in Fe(II)/Fe(III) stoichiometry and even dissolve the
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A potential nitrogen sink discovered in the oxygenated Chukchi Shelf waters of the Arctic. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2017-09-20 Jian Zeng,Min Chen,Minfang Zheng,Wangjiang Hu,Yusheng Qiu
The western Arctic Shelf has long been considered as an important sink of nitrogen because high primary productivity of the shelf water fuels active denitrification within the sediments, which has been recognized to account for all the nitrogen (N) removal of the Pacific water inflow. However, potentially high denitrifying activity was discovered within the oxygenated Chukchi Shelf water during our
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Salinization and arsenic contamination of surface water in southwest Bangladesh. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2017-09-11 John C Ayers,Gregory George,David Fry,Laura Benneyworth,Carol Wilson,Leslie Auerbach,Kushal Roy,Md Rezaul Karim,Farjana Akter,Steven Goodbred
To identify the causes of salinization and arsenic contamination of surface water on an embanked island (i.e., polder) in the tidal delta plain of SW Bangladesh we collected and analyzed water samples in the dry (May) and wet (October) seasons in 2012-2013. Samples were collected from rice paddies (wet season), saltwater ponds used for brine shrimp aquaculture (dry season), freshwater ponds and tidal
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Weakly bound water structure, bond valence saturation and water dynamics at the goethite (100) surface/aqueous interface: ab initio dynamical simulations. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2017-03-31 Ying Chen,Eric J Bylaska,John H Weare
BACKGROUND Many important geochemical and biogeochemical reactions occur in the mineral/formation water interface of the highly abundant mineral, goethite [α-Fe(OOH)]. Ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations of the goethite α-FeOOH (100) surface and the structure, water bond formation and dynamics of water molecules in the mineral/aqueous interface are presented. Several exchange correlation
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Global hydrogen reservoirs in basement and basins. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2017-03-20 John Parnell,Nigel Blamey
BACKGROUND Hydrogen is known to occur in the groundwaters of some ancient cratons. Where associated gases have been dated, their age extends up to a billion years, and the hydrogen is assumed also to be very old. These observations are interpreted to represent the radiolysis of water and hydration reactions and migration of hydrogen into fracture systems. A hitherto untested implication is that the
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A survey of photogeochemistry. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2017-02-10 Timothy A Doane
The participation of sunlight in the natural chemistry of the earth is presented as a unique field of study, from historical observations to prospects for future inquiry. A compilation of known reactions shows the extent of light-driven interactions between naturally occurring components of land, air, and water, and provides the backdrop for an outline of the mechanisms of these phenomena. Catalyzed
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How long do natural waters “remember” release incidents of Marcellus Shale waters: a first order approximation using reactive transport modeling Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2016-12-13 Zhang Cai, Li Li
Natural gas production from the Marcellus Shale formation has significantly changed energy landscape in recent years. Accidental release, including spills, leakage, and seepage of the Marcellus Shale flow back and produced waters can impose risks on natural water resources. With many competing processes during the reactive transport of chemical species, it is not clear what processes are dominant and
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Oxidation of arsenite to arsenate on birnessite in the presence of light. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2016-10-06 Samantha L Shumlas,Soujanya Singireddy,Akila C Thenuwara,Nuwan H Attanayake,Richard J Reeder,Daniel R Strongin
The effect of simulated solar radiation on the oxidation of arsenite [As(III)] to arsenate [As(V)] on the layered manganese oxide, birnessite, was investigated. Experiments were conducted where birnessite suspensions, under both anoxic and oxic conditions, were irradiated with simulated solar radiation in the presence of As(III) at pH 5, 7, and 9. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) was used to determine
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Sources of salinity and arsenic in groundwater in southwest Bangladesh. Geochem. Trans. (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2016-07-11 John C Ayers,Steven Goodbred,Gregory George,David Fry,Laura Benneyworth,George Hornberger,Kushal Roy,Md Rezaul Karim,Farjana Akter
BACKGROUND High salinity and arsenic (As) concentrations in groundwater are widespread problems in the tidal deltaplain of southwest Bangladesh. To identify the sources of dissolved salts and As, groundwater samples from the regional shallow Holocene aquifer were collected from tubewells during the dry (May) and wet (October) seasons in 2012-2013. Thirteen drill cores were logged and 27 radiocarbon