Geogenic, Anthropogenic, and Authigenic Minerals Hosting Arsenic and Antimony in Yellowknife Bay Sediments

Author:

Paudyn Katrina A.12,Jamieson Heather E.12,Chételat John3,Schuh Christopher E.2,Palmer Michael J.4,Mchale Sean2

Affiliation:

1. School of Environmental Studies, BioSciences Complex, Room 3134, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada

2. Department of Geological Sciences and Geological Engineering, 36 Union Street, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada

3. Environment and Climate Change Canada, National Wildlife Research Centre, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6, Canada

4. North Slave Research Centre, Aurora Research Institute, 5004-54th Street, Aurora College, Yellowknife, Northwest Territories X1A 2R3, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Yellowknife Bay (Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories, Canada) is a water body valued by surrounding communities for its subsistence, recreational, and cultural use. Located directly downstream of the former Giant Mine and Con Mine, Yellowknife Bay has received inputs from mine waste streams enriched in arsenic (As), antimony (Sb), and metals since the late 1930s. Lake sediments in Yellowknife Bay provide a record of metal(loid) contamination from aerially deposited roaster stack emissions, mine effluent, and Giant Mine tailings. A sediment sampling program was conducted in Yellowknife Bay to characterize As and Sb mineralogy using scanning electron microscopy-mineral liberation analysis. Mineralogical analysis of As- and Sb-hosted minerals in nine sediment cores suggests that arsenic trioxide (As2O3), originally deposited during the period of peak-mining emissions, has since been transformed into authigenic sulfides (interpreted to be realgar) down core from peak-mining emissions. Arsenic has also been attenuated by iron (Fe)-oxyhydroxides and roaster-generated iron oxides up-core from peak-mining emissions, near the sediment–water interface. The Sb-bearing minerals appear to be stable in Yellowknife Bay sediments, with no conclusive evidence of post-depositional mobility having been identified. The observed prevalence of arsenic trioxide in surface sediments proximal to Giant Mine suggests that As and Sb contamination is ongoing, likely from terrestrial weathering of contaminated soils and shoreline outcrops. Arsenic-bearing oxide minerals prevalent in surface sediments may become unstable should redox conditions in the hypolimnion change; prolonged anoxia could destabilize the As hosting minerals and release As to bottom waters. Therefore, long-term monitoring of the water column, including hypolimnion conditions, in Yellowknife Bay is recommended.

Publisher

Mineralogical Association of Canada

Reference56 articles.

1. Andrade, C.F. (2006) Arsenic Cycling and Speciation in Mining-Impacted Sediments and Pore-Waters from Yellowknife Bay, Great Slave Lake, NWT . MSc Thesis. Department of Geological Sciences and Geological Engineering. Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

2. Biogeochemical redox cycling of arsenic in mine-impacted lake sediments and co-existing pore waters near Giant Mine, Yellowknife Bay, Canada;Andrade,;Applied Geochemistry,(2010)

3. Diffusive gradients in thin films reveals differences in antimony and arsenic mobility in a contaminated wetland sediment during an oxic-anoxic transition;Arsic,;Environmental Science & Technology,(2018)

4. Environmental mobility of antimony around mesothermal stibnite deposits, New South Wales, Australia and southern New Zealand;Ashley,;Journal of Geochemical Exploration,(2003)

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