Biogeochemical transformation of Fe minerals in a petroleum-contaminated aquifer

被引:45
|
作者
Zachara, JM
Kukkadapu, RK
Gassman, PL
Dohnalkova, A
Fredrickson, JK
Anderson, T
机构
[1] Pacific NW Natl Lab, Richland, WA 99352 USA
[2] Univ Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.gca.2003.09.022
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The Bemidji aquifer in Minnesota, USA is a well-studied site of subsurface petroleum contamination. The site contains an anoxic groundwater plume where soluble petroleum constituents serve as all energy Source for a region of methanogenesis near the source and bacterial Fe(III) reduction further down gradient. Methanogenesis apparently begins when bioavailable Fe(III) is exhausted within the sediment. Past Studies indicate that Geobacter species and Geothrix fermentens-like organisms are the primary dissimilatory Fe-reducing bacteria at this site. The Fe mineralogy of the pristine aquifer sediments and samples front the methanogenic (source) and Fe(III) reducing zones were characterized in this study to identify microbiologic changes to Fe valence and mineral distribution, and to identify whether new biogenic mineral phases had formed. Methods applied included X-ray diffraction: X-ray fluorescence (XRF); and chemical extraction; optical. transmission, and scanning electron microscopy; and Mossbauer spectroscopy. All of the sediments were low in total Fe content (approximate to 1%) and exhibited complex Fe-mineralogy. The bulk pristine sediment and its sand, silt, and clay-sized fractions were studied in detail. The pristine sediments contained Fe(II) and Fe(III) mineral phases. Ferrous iron represented approximately 50% of Fe-TOT. The relative Fe(II) concentration increased in the sand fraction, and its primary mineralogic residence was clinochlore with minor concentrations found as a ferroan calcite grain cement in carbonate lithic fragments. Fe(III) existed in silicates (epidote, clinochlore, muscovite) and Fe(Ill) oxides of detrital and authigenic origin. The detrital Fe(III) oxides included hematite and goethite in the form of mm-sized nodular concretions and smaller-sized dispersed crystallites, and euhedral magnetite grains. Authigenic Fe(III) oxides increased in concentration with decreasing particle size through the silt and clay fraction. Chemical extraction and Mossbauer analysis indicated that this was a ferrihydrite like-phase. Quantitative mineralogic and Fe(II/III) ratio comparisons between the pristine and contaminated sediments were not possible because of textural differences. However, comparisons between the texturally-similar source (where bioavailable Fe(III) had been exhausted) and Fe(III) reducing zone sediments (where bioavailable Fe(III) remained) indicated that dispersed detrital, crystalline Fe(III) oxides and a portion of: the authigenic, poorly crystalline Fe(Ill) oxide fraction had been depleted front the source zone sediment by microbiologic activity. Little or no effect of microbiologic activity was observed oil silicate Fe(III). The presence of residual "ferrihydrite" in the most bioreduced, anoxic plume sediment (Source) implied that a portion of the authigenic Fe(III) oxides were biologically inaccessible in weathered. lithic fragment interiors. Little evidence was found for the modern biogenesis of authigenic ferrous-containing mineral phases, perhaps with the exception of thin siderite or ferroan calcite surface precipitates on carbonate lithic fragments within source zone sediments. Copyright (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd.
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收藏
页码:1791 / 1805
页数:15
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