Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/485
Title: Formational processes of recent, arsenic rich, ferromanganese lacustrine precipitates in Nova Scotia and Northern Ontario
Authors: Kerkermeier, Leah
Keywords: Water chemistry;Geochemistry;Microbiology;Nodule growth models
Issue Date: 22-Jan-2014
Abstract: Banded iron - and manganese - rich precipitates were collected from the lake bottoms of Lake Charlotte (Nova Scotia), Lake Shebandowan (Ontario) and Sowden Lake (Ontario). Investigations of study areas at the macro, meso and micro scale were conducted to understand the iron-manganese rich- nodules in their natural environment. The nodules appear as circular precipitate bands which alternate between high concentrations of iron and manganese. Analysis of precipitates revealed that those from Lake Charlotte are highly concentrated in arsenic. Lake Shebadowan and Sowden Lake samples are highly concentrated in phosphorous. Correlation between iron, arsenic and phosphorous suggests oxidation and precipitation of these elements in the same bands of the nodule. Iron relies on the Eh and pH of an environment to precipitate from solution. At a redox boundary in a near neutral environment, iron is able to oxidize as a sediment coating and co-precipitate arsenic and phosphorous from the water. An affiliation between manganese, barium and cobalt suggests precipitation of these elements in the alternate bands present in the nodule. Barium and cobalt are able to co-precipitate with manganese by either penetrating a manganese oxide by means of protonation, or oxidize and become interchangeable with Mn4+. The growth of the nodules at Shebandowan and the majority of Lake Charlotte sites were probably affected by a redox boundary created by the diffuse upward flow of groundwater with lower Eh than the oxidized lake water. It is likely that photosynthetic and iron and manganese oxidizing microorganisms are present in a bacterial mat covering the nodules and probably played a role in their precipitation. Analysis of the growth mechanisms of precipitates revealed in Sowden Lake and the Granite Islands site of Lake Charlotte were inconclusive.
URI: http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/485
metadata.etd.degree.discipline: Geology
metadata.etd.degree.name: M.Sc.
metadata.etd.degree.level: Master
metadata.dc.contributor.advisor: Fralick, Philip
Appears in Collections:Electronic Theses and Dissertations from 2009

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