Pore water and solid phase geochemistry of sediment core US5B


Autoria(s): Egger, Matthias; Jilbert, Tom; Behrends, Thilo; Rivard, Camille; Slomp, Caroline P
Cobertura

LATITUDE: 62.586200 * LONGITUDE: 19.968800

Data(s)

09/12/2015

Resumo

Studies of authigenic phosphorus (P) minerals in marine sediments typically focus on authigenic carbonate fluorapatite, which is considered to be the major sink for P in marine sediments and can easily be semi-quantitatively extracted with the SEDEX sequential extraction method. The role of other potentially important authigenic P phases, such as the reduced iron (Fe) phosphate mineral vivianite (Fe(II)3(PO4)*8H2O) has so far largely been ignored in marine systems. This is, in part, likely due to the fact that the SEDEX method does not distinguish between vivianite and P associated with Fe-oxides. Here, we show that vivianite can be quantified in marine sediments by combining the SEDEX method with microscopic and spectroscopic techniques such as micro X-ray fluorescence (µXRF) elemental mapping of resin-embedded sediments, as well as scanning electron microscope-energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS) and powder X-ray diffraction (XRD). We further demonstrate that resin embedding of vertically intact sediment sub-cores enables the use of synchrotron-based microanalysis (X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy) to differentiate between different P burial phases in aquatic sediments. Our results reveal that vivianite represents a major burial sink for P below a shallow sulfate/methane transition zone in Bothnian Sea sediments, accounting for 40-50% of total P burial. We further show that anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) drives a sink-switching from Fe-oxide bound P to vivianite by driving the release of both phosphate (AOM with sulfate and Fe-oxides) and ferrous Fe (AOM with Fe-oxides) to the pore water allowing supersaturation with respect to vivianite to be reached. The vivianite in the sediment contains significant amounts of manganese (~4-8 wt.%), similar to vivianite obtained from freshwater sediments. Our results indicate that methane dynamics play a key role in providing conditions that allow for vivianite authigenesis in coastal surface sediments. We suggest that vivianite may act as an important burial sink for P in brackish coastal environments worldwide.

Formato

application/zip, 6 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.855682

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.855682

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY-NC-ND: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Egger, Matthias; Jilbert, Tom; Behrends, Thilo; Rivard, Camille; Slomp, Caroline P (2015): Vivianite is a major sink for phosphorus in methanogenic coastal surface sediments. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 169, 217-235, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2015.09.012

Palavras-Chave #(H2S + HS- + S2-); [HPO4]2-; [NH4]+; [SO4]2-; Acid volatile sulfides; Alkalinity, total; Ammonium; AT; AVS; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Carbon, organic, total; CH4; CRS; Depth; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DIC; Fe; Fe/Al; Fe2+; Fecarb = carbonate associated Fe, including siderite and ankerite; Femagn = Fe in recalcitrant oxides (mostly magnetite); Fe-monosulfide, FeS; Feox/Fe-P; Feox1 = easily reducible (amorphous) oxides, ferrihydrite and lepidocrite; Feox2 = reducible (crystalline) oxides, including goethite, hematite and akageneite; Fe tot; GEMAX; GNC_X; Gulf of Bothnia, Baltic sea; H2S; Hydrogen phosphate; Hydrogen sulfide; Iron; Iron, total; Iron/Aluminium ratio; Iron 2+; Manganese; Manganese 2+; Methane; Mn; Mn2+; P CaCO3-bound; P detr; P exch; P extr; P Fe-bound; Phosphorus, calcium carbonate-bound; Phosphorus, detrital; Phosphorus, exchangeable; Phosphorus, extracted; Phosphorus, iron-bound; Phosphorus, organic; Phosphorus, total; P org; Poros; Porosity; Pyrite, FeS2; Ratio; Sulfate; Sulfur, chromium reducible; Sulfur, total; TOC; TP; TS; US5B
Tipo

Dataset