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Mössbauer spectroscopy and X-ray fluorescence studies on sediments from the methanic zone of the Helgoland mud area,North Sea
Authors:B F O Costa  M Blumers  S I Shylin  V Ksenofontov  O Oni  S Kasten  D Fischer  L Wagenknecht  A Kulkarni  M W Friedrich  G Klingelhöfer
Institution:1.CFisUC, Physics Department,University of Coimbra,Coimbra,Portugal;2.Institute for Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry,Johannes Gutenberg University,Mainz,Germany;3.Department of Chemistry,Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv,Volodymyrska,Ukraine;4.Microbial Ecophysiology group, Faculty of Biology/Chemistry,University of Bremen,Bremen,Germany;5.MARUM, Center for Marine Environmental Sciences,University of Bremen,Bremen,Germany;6.Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research,Bremerhaven,Germany
Abstract:57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy (MS) and X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF) were used to determine the identity of iron(III) oxides in surface (top 30 cm ) and subsurface (> 30 cm – 500 cm)sediments from the Helgoland mud area in the German Bight of the North Sea. A 500 cm-long sediment core was cut in 25cm sections while only the top 10 cm of a 30 cm-long sediment core was sampled. Using a MIMOS spectrometer, MS spectra were recorded at 293K (RT) in backscattering geometry. At 80K and 5.5K, MS analysis was carried out in transmission geometry. At RT and 80K only illite was observed, but at 5.5K lepidocrocite was revealed in the MS spectra. The relation between Fe(III) and Fe(II) doublets of illite did not significantly vary with depth, but the relative amount of lepidocrocite increased with depth reaching about 24 % of iron phases, as revealed by MS. XRF measurements showed that the amount of Fe in the sediments varied with depth but was always less than 4 % of total elemental composition. The main component of the sediment was silica and its depth profile alternated with those of other elements, especially aluminium and iron. It was observed that elevated concentrations of dissolved iron in the subsurface sediment of the Helgoland mud area correlated with the depth-wise distribution of distinct microbial populations presumably due to microbial reduction of excess bioavailable iron minerals such as lepidocrocite. These results are thus, important in the context of microbe-mineral interactions in marine sediments as iron oxides are an electron acceptor for microbial anaerobic respiration.
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