Author:
Bush Richard T.,Sullivan Leigh A.
Abstract
The distribution and morphology of pyrite in 3 Holocene estuarine sediments
were examined using light microscopy, analytical scanning electron microscopy,
and X-ray diffraction. The distribution and morphologies of pyrite were
similar with pyrite being dispersed throughout the soil matrices as well as
concentrated in root remnants and other macropores. The pyrite occurred in
both framboidal and irregularly shaped dense clusters from 4 to 15 µm
diameter, and also in loose clusters. Individual crystals in these clusters
ranged in size from 1 to 2 µm. Pyrite crystals exhibited octahedral,
pyritohedral, and equant anhedral (i.e. rounded globular) habit. Organic
matter coatings and clay coatings were common around pyrite at each site. Thin
coatings of monosulfide with an acicular morphology occurred around some
framboidal clusters at one site. The distribution of framboids and individual
crystals in the clayey matrix, root remnants, and other macropores indicates
that the pyrite in these sediments has formed in situ.
These data have important implications for the rate of sulfide oxidation and
acid production from these soils.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
22 articles.
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