Literature DB >> 16124299

Sulfur speciation and stable isotope trends of water-soluble sulfates in mine tailings profiles.

Bernhard Dold1, Jorge E Spangenberg.   

Abstract

Sulfur speciation and the sources of water-soluble sulfate in three oxidizing sulfidic mine tailings impoundments were investigated by selective dissolution and stable isotopes. The studied tailings impoundments--Piuquenes, Cauquenes, and Salvador No. 1--formed from the exploitation of the Rio Blanco/La Andina, El Teniente, and El Salvador Chilean porphyry copper deposits, which are located in Alpine, Mediterranean, and hyperarid climates, respectively. The water-soluble sulfate may originate from dissolution of primary ore sulfates (e.g., gypsum, anhydrite, jarosite) or from oxidation of sulfide minerals exposed to aerobic conditions during mining activity. With increasing aridity and decreasing pyrite content of the tailings, the sulfur speciation in the unsaturated oxidation zones showed a trend from dominantly Fe(III) oxyhydroxide fixed sulfate (e.g., jarosite and schwertmannite) in Piuquenes toward increasing presence of water-soluble sulfate at Cauquenes and Salvador No. 1. In the saturated primary zones, sulfate is predominantly present in water-soluble form (mainly as anhydrite and/or gypsum). In the unsaturated zone at Piuquenes and Cauquenes, the delta34S(SO4)values ranged from +0.5 per thousand to +2.0 per thousand and from -0.4 per thousand to +1.4 per thousand Vienna Canyon Diablo Troilite (V-CDT), respectively, indicating a major sulfate source from pyrite oxidation (delta34S(pyrite) = -1.1 per thousand and -0.9 per thousand). In the saturated zone at Piuquenes and Cauquenes, the values ranged from -0.8 per thousand to +0.3 per thousand and from +2.2 per thousand to +3.9 per thousand, respectively. At Cauquenes the 34S enrichment in the saturated zone toward depth indicates the increasing contribution of isotopically heavy dissolved sulfate from primary anhydrite (approximately +10.9 per thousand). At El Salvador No. 1, the delta34S(SO4) average value is -0.9 per thousand, suggesting dissolution of supergene sulfate minerals (jarosite, alunite, gypsum) with a delta34S approximately -0.7 per thousand as the most probable sulfate source. The gradual decrease of delta18O(SO4) values from the surface to the oxidation front in the tailings impoundments at Piuquenes (from -4.5 per thousand to -8.6 per thousand Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water, V-SMOW) and at Cauquenes (from -1.3 per thousand to -3.5 per thousand) indicates the increasing importance of ferric iron as the main electron acceptor in the oxidation of pyrite. The different delta18O(SO4) values between the tailings impoundments studied here reflect the local climates.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16124299     DOI: 10.1021/es040093a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  3 in total

1.  Biogeometallurgical pre-mining characterization of ore deposits: an approach to increase sustainability in the mining process.

Authors:  Bernhard Dold; Leyla Weibel
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2013-04-25       Impact factor: 4.223

2.  Environmental and socioeconomic assessment of impacts by mining activities-a case study in the Certej River catchment, Western Carpathians, Romania.

Authors:  Jürg Zobrist; Mihaela Sima; Diana Dogaru; Marin Senila; Hong Yang; Claudia Popescu; Cecilia Roman; Abraham Bela; Linda Frei; Bernhard Dold; Dan Balteanu
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2009-01-22       Impact factor: 4.223

3.  Safe, accurate, and precise sulfur isotope analyses of arsenides, sulfarsenides, and arsenic and mercury sulfides by conversion to barium sulfate before EA/IRMS.

Authors:  Jorge E Spangenberg; Nicolas J Saintilan; Sabina Strmić Palinkaš
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2022-01-23       Impact factor: 4.142

  3 in total

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