Arsenic mobilization during seawater inundation of acid sulfate soils - Hydrogeochemical coupling at the tidal fringe
- Authors: Johnston, Scott , Burton, Edward , Keene, Annabelle , Bush, Richard , Sullivan, Leigh
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Conference proceedings
- Full Text: false
- Description: Coastal Acid Sulfate Soils (CASS) are rich in meta-stable iron (Fe - III) minerals that are important sorbents for arsenic (As) under oxic conditions. Tidal seawater inundation to remediate CASS has recently been trialed on a large scale and has potential to mobilize arsenic during the redox transition. Tidal seawater inundation caused reductive dissolution of As(V)-bearing Fe(III) minerals, resulting in elevated concentrations of Fe 2+ (2000 mg L -1) and As (∼400 μg L -1) in upper-intertidal zone groundwater. Oscillating vertical and horizontal hydraulic gradients caused by tidal pumping promoted upward advection of As and Fe 2+-enriched groundwater within the intertidal zone. This led to flux of As aq and Fe 2+ aq to surface waters and the accumulation of As(V)-enriched Fe(III) (hydr)oxides at the oxic sediment-water interface. Fe(III) (hydr)oxides at the sediment-water interface act as a natural reactive-barrier, retarding As flux to overlying surface waters. However, they also represent a highly transient phase that is prone to reductive dissolution during future redox boundary migration. A conceptual model is presented to explain landscape-scale patterns of As and Fe hydro-geochemical zonation. © 2012 Taylor & Francis Group.
Arsenic mobilization in a seawater inundated acid sulfate soil
- Authors: Johnston, Scott , Keene, Annabelle , Burton, Edward , Bush, Richard , Sullivan, Leigh , McElnea, Angus , Ahern, Col , Smith, C. Douglas , Powell, Bernard , Hocking, Rosalie
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Environmental Science and Technology Vol. 44, no. 6 (2010), p. 1968-1973
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- Description: Tidal seawater inundation of coastal acid sulfate soils can generate Fe- and SO4-reducing conditions in previously oxicacidic sediments, This creates potential for mobilization of As during the redox transition. We explore the consequences for As by investigating the hydrology, porewater geochemistry, solid-phase speciation, and mineralogical partitioning of As across two tidal fringe toposequences. Seawater inundation induced a tidally controlled redox gradient. Maximum porewater As (∼400μg/L) occurred in the shallow (<1 m), intertidal, redox transition zone between Fe-oxidizing and SO 4-reducing conditions. Primary mechanisms of As mobilization include the reduction of solid-phase As(V) to As(III), reductive dissolution of As(V)-bearing secondary Fe(III) minerals and competitive anion desorption. Porewater As concentrations decreased in the zone of contemporary pyrite reformation, Oscillating hydraulic gradients caused by tidal pumping promote upward advection of As and Fe2+-enriched porewater in the intertidal zone, leading to accumulation of As(V)-enriched Fe(III) (hydr)oxides at the oxic sediment-water interface. While this provides a natural reactive-Fe barrier, it does not completely retard the flux of porewater As to overtopping surface waters. Furthermore, the accumulated Fe minerals may be prone to future reductive dissolution, A conceptual model describing As hydro-geochemical coupling across an intertidal fringe is presented. © 2010 American Chemical Society.