Mineralogical and textural evolution of the economic manganese mineralisation in western Rhodope massif, N. Greece

1991 ◽  
Vol 55 (380) ◽  
pp. 423-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. Nimfopoulos ◽  
R. A. D. Pattrick

AbstractThe western Rhodope massif contains a significant number of ‘battery grade’ Mn-oxide deposits which are best developed in the area near Kato Nevrokopi, Drama district, N. Greece. Economic Mn-oxide ore concentrations are confined to fault zones and related karsts in marbles. The mineralisation has formed by weathering of hydrothermal veins that were genetically related to Oligocene magmatism.At Kato Nevrokopi, progressive and continuous weathering of primary, hydrothermal veins of rhodochrosite, mixed sulphide, quartz and ‘black calcite’ (calcite and todorokite) has resulted in the formation of the assemblage MnO-gel-(amorphous Mn-oxide)-todorokite-azurite-goethite-cerussite in the veins and the assemblage MnO-gel-nsutite-chalcophanite-birnessite-cryptomelane-pyrolusite and malachite and amorphous Fe-oxides in karstic cavities.The fs2 and fO2 of the hydrothermal fluids increased with time. The breakdown of the hypogene Mn-carbonate was aided by the production of an acidic fluid due to the oxidation of sulphides. Precipitation of the supergene ores was caused by neutralisation of the fluids due to reaction with the host marble and to mixing of relatively reduced fluids with oxygenated surface water in a fluctuation water table regime. Zinc was also mobile during weathering and became concentrated in the intermediate Mn-oxides, effectively stabilising their structures. The mineral paragenesis records the progressive oxidation of the ore and the appearance of less hydrated Mn-oxides, low in alkalis and alkaline earths.

2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 1039-1045 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Mahdi Najafpour ◽  
Emad Amini
Keyword(s):  
Low Cost ◽  
Mn Oxide ◽  

Nanolayered Mn oxides have been prepared by a very simple, low-cost and high-yield method using soap, KOH, MnCl2and H2O2.


Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian P. Neff ◽  
Donald O. Rosenberry ◽  
Scott G. Leibowitz ◽  
Dave M. Mushet ◽  
Heather E. Golden ◽  
...  

Research into processes governing the hydrologic connectivity of depressional wetlands has advanced rapidly in recent years. Nevertheless, a need persists for broadly applicable, non-site-specific guidance to facilitate further research. Here, we explicitly use the hydrologic landscapes theoretical framework to develop broadly applicable conceptual knowledge of depressional-wetland hydrologic connectivity. We used a numerical model to simulate the groundwater flow through five generic hydrologic landscapes. Next, we inserted depressional wetlands into the generic landscapes and repeated the modeling exercise. The results strongly characterize groundwater connectivity from uplands to lowlands as being predominantly indirect. Groundwater flowed from uplands and most of it was discharged to the surface at a concave-upward break in slope, possibly continuing as surface water to lowlands. Additionally, we found that groundwater connectivity of the depressional wetlands was primarily determined by the slope of the adjacent water table. However, we identified certain arrangements of landforms that caused the water table to fall sharply and not follow the surface contour. Finally, we synthesize our findings and provide guidance to practitioners and resource managers regarding the management significance of indirect groundwater discharge and the effect of depressional wetland groundwater connectivity on pond permanence and connectivity.


Minerals ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 599 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christiana Mystrioti ◽  
Nymphodora Papassiopi ◽  
Anthimos Xenidis ◽  
Konstantinos Komnitsas

A hydrochloric acid hydrometallurgical process was evaluated for Ni and Co extraction from a low-grade saprolitic laterite. The main characteristics of the process were (i) the application of a counter-current mode of operation as the main leaching step (CCL), and (ii) the treatment of pregnant leach solution (PLS) with a series of simple precipitation steps. It was found that, during CCL, co-dissolution of Fe was maintained at very low levels, i.e., about 0.6%, which improved the effectiveness of the subsequent PLS purification step. The treatment of PLS involved an initial precipitation step for the removal of trivalent metals, Fe, Al, and Cr, using Mg(OH)2. The process steps that followed aimed at separating Ni and Co from Mn and the alkaline earths Mg and Ca, by a combination of repetitive oxidative precipitation and dissolution steps. Magnesium and calcium remained in the aqueous phase, Mn was removed as a solid residue of Mn(III)–Mn(IV) oxides, while Ni and Co were recovered as a separate aqueous stream. It was found that the overall Ni and Co recoveries were 40% and 38%, respectively. About 45% of Ni and 37% of Co remained in the leach residue, while 15% Ni and 20% Co were lost in the Mn oxides.


Fluid infiltration into fault zones and their deeper level counterparts, brittle-ductile shear zones, is examined in five different tectonic environments. In the 2.7 Ga Abitibi Greenstone Belt major tectonic discontinuities have lateral extents of hundreds of kilometres. These structures, initiated as listric normal faults accommodating rift extension of the greenstone belt, acted as sites for the extrusion of komatiitic magmas, and formed submarine scarps which delimit linear belts of clastic and chemical sediments. During reverse motion on the structures, accommodating shortening of the belt, these transcrustal faults were used as a conduit for the ascent of trondhjemitic magmas from the base of the crust, alkaline magmas from the asthenosphere, and for discharge of hundreds of cubic kilometres of hydrothermal fluids. Such fluids were characterized by δ 18 O = 6 ± 2, δD = —50 ± 20, δ 13 C = —4 ± 3, and temperatures of 270-450 °C, probably derived from devolatilization of crustal rocks undergoing prograde metamorphism. Hydrothermal fluids were more radiogenic ( 87 Sr/ 86 Sr = 0.7010-0.7040) and possessed higher values of μ than contemporaneous mantle, komatiites or tholeiites, and thus carried a contribution from older sialic basement. Mineralized faults possess enrichments of l.i.l. elements, including K, Rb, Li, Cs, B and C0 2 , as well as rare elements such as Au, Ag, As, Sb, Se, Te, Bi, W. Fluids were characterized by X CO2 ≈ 0.1, neutral to slightly acidic pH, low salinity (less than 3% by mass), and K /N a ≈ 0.1, carried minor CH4, CO and N 2 , and underwent transient effervescence of CO 2 during decompression. At Yellowknife, a series of large-scale shear zones developed by brittle-ductile mechanisms, involving volume dilation with the migration of ca. 5% (by mass) volatiles into the shear zone from surrounding metabasalts. This early deformation involved no departures in redox state or whole-rock δ 18 O from background states of Fe 2 /eFe = 0.7 and δ 18 O of 7-7.5 ‰ respectively, attesting to conditions of low water/rock ratios. Shear zones subsequently acted as high-permeability conduits for pulsed discharge of more than 9 km 3 of reduced metamorphic hydrothermal fluids at 360-450 °C. The West Bay Fault, a late major transcurrent structure, contains massive vein quartz that grew at 200-300 °C from fluids of 2- 6 % salinity (possibly formation brines). At the Grenville Front, translation was accommodated along two mylonite zones and an intervening boundary fault. The high-temperature (MZ II) and lowtemperature (MZ I) mylonite zones formed at 580-640 °C and 430-490 °C, respectively, in the presence of fluids of metamorphic origin, indigenous to the immediate rocks. A population of post-tectonic quartz veins occupying brittle fractures were precipitated from fluids with extremely negative δ 18 O at 200-300 °C. The water may have been derived from downward penetration into fault zones of low 18 O precipitation on a mountain range induced by continental collision, with uplift accommodated at deep levels by the mylonite zones coupled with rebound on the boundary faults. At Lagoa Real, Brazil, Archaean gneisses overlie Proterozoic sediments along thrust surfaces, and contain brittle-ductile shear zones locally occupied by uranium deposits. Following deformation at 500-540 °C, in the presence of metamorphic fluids and under conditions of low water/rock ratios, shear zones underwent local intense oxidation and desilication. All minerals undergo a shift of — 10‰ δ 18 O, indicating discharge up through the Archaean gneisses of formation brines recharged by meteoric water in the underlying Proterozoic sediments during overthrusting: about 1000 km 3 of solution passed through these structures. The shear zones and Proterozoic sediments are less radiogenic ( 87 Sr/ 86 Sr = 0.720) than contemporaneous Archaean gneisses ( 87 Sr/ 86 Sr = 0.900), corroborating transport of fluids and solutes through the structure from a large external reservoir. Major crustal detachment faults of Tertiary age in the Picacho Cordilleran metamorphic core complex of Arizona show an upward transition from undeformed granitic basement, through mylonitic to brecciated and hydrothermally altered counterparts. The highest tectonic levels are allochthonous, oxidatively altered Miocene volcanics, with hydrothermal sediments in listric normal fault basins. This transition is accompanied by a 12‰ increase in δ 18 O from 7 to 19, and a decrease of temperature of 400 °C, because of expulsion of large volumes of metamorphic fluids during detachment. In the Miocene allochthon, mixing occurred between cool downward-penetrating meteoric thermal waters and hot, deeper aqueous reservoirs. In general, flow regimes in these fault and shear zones follow a sequence from conditions of high temperature and pressure with locally derived fluids at low water/rock ratios during initiation of the structures, to high fluxes of reduced formation or metamorphic fluids along conduits as the structures propagate and intersect hydrothermal reservoirs. Later in the tectonic evolution and at shallower crustal levels, there was incursion of oxidizing fluids from near-surface reservoirs into the faults.


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 766
Author(s):  
Basil Gomez

The Mānā Plain is a land apart, buffered from oceanographic influences by ~3–35 m high backshore deposits, and drained by an intricate, >100-y-old ditch system and modern, large-capacity pumps. Quantifying present and prospective inputs and outputs for the hydrologic landscape suggests that, although sea-level rise (SLR) will begin to impact ditch system operations in 2040, transient, event-based flooding caused by rainfall, not SLR induced, multi-mechanism flooding, will continue to pose the most immediate threat. This is because as sea level rises the ability of gravity flows to discharge storm runoff directly into the ocean will diminish, causing floodwater to pond in low-lying depressions. Estimates of the volume of water involved suggests the risk of flooding from surface water is likely to extend to 5.45 km2 of land that is presently ≤ 1 m above sea level. This land will not be permanently inundated, but weeks of pumping may be required to remove the floodwater. Increasing pumping capacity and preserving some operational ability to discharge storm runoff under the influence of gravity will enhance the ditch system’s resilience to SLR and ensure it continues to fulfill its primary functions, of maintaining the water table below the root zone and diverting storm runoff away from farmland, at least until the end of this century.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydia Pohl ◽  
Kristof Dorau ◽  
Christopher Just ◽  
Carmen Höschen ◽  
Kristian Ufer ◽  
...  

<p>In redoximorphic soils, iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) oxides undergo reduction with subsequent oxidation of their reduced counterparts (Fe<sup>2+</sup> and Mn<sup>2+</sup>) impacting nutrient sorption and the stability of soil organic matter (SOM). One tool to investigate the soil redox status is the indicator of reduction in soils (IRIS) method. Thereby, synthetic Fe and Mn oxides are coated onto polyvinyl chloride (PVC) bars, which are typically installed for an operator-defined period in the soil. After removal of the bars we studied organo-mineral associations, which have been formed under field conditions on the surface of the coated bars.</p><p>In this study, each one Mn and Fe oxide-coated redox bar were installed for 30 days in a Mollic Gleysol. A previous study revealed, that the Mn oxide coating facilitated a non-enzymatic redox reaction under anoxic conditions, while Fe<sup>2+</sup> from the soil solution is oxidized to Fe<sup>3+</sup> along the Mn oxide coating and Mn<sup>2+</sup> is removed from the PVC surface [1]. In consequence, in situ Fe oxides formed along the Mn oxide coatings and were further considered as ‘natural’ Fe oxides. This enables us to differentiate between sorption occurring onto the surfaces of ‘synthetic’ Fe oxides from the Fe bar versus ‘natural’ formed Fe oxides along the Mn bar. They were analysed by nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) to study the distribution of Fe (<sup>56</sup>Fe<sup>16</sup>O<sup>−</sup>), SOM (<sup>12</sup>C<sup>14</sup>N<sup>−</sup>), and phosphorus (<sup>31</sup>P<sup>16</sup>O<sub>2</sub><sup>−</sup>). NanoSIMS is a spectromicroscopic technique offering a high lateral resolution of about 100 nm, while having a great sensitivity for light elements. In contrast to classic bulk analysis, it offers the possibility to examine the spatial distribution of SOM and phosphorous at the microscale within the intact organo-mineral matrix. </p><p>Image analysis of individual Fe oxide particles revealed a close association of Fe, SOM, and P resulting in coverage values up to 71% for synthetic and natural iron oxides. Furthermore, ion ratios between sorbent (<sup>56</sup>Fe<sup>16</sup>O<sup>−</sup>) and sorbate (<sup>12</sup>C<sup>14</sup>N<sup>−</sup>; <sup>31</sup>P<sup>16</sup>O<sub>2</sub><sup>−</sup>) were smaller along the natural oxides when compared with those for synthetic Fe oxides. We conclude that both natural and synthetic Fe oxides rapidly sequestered SOM and P (i.e., within 30 days) but that newly, natural formed Fe oxides sorbed more SOM and P than synthetic Fe oxides.</p><p> </p><p>[1] Dorau, K.; Eickmeier, M.; Mansfeldt, T. Comparison of Manganese and Iron Oxide-Coated Redox Bars for Characterization of the Redox Status in Wetland Soils. Wetlands 2016, 36, 133–144.</p>


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