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Creation of important nickel ore deposits linked to ancient atmosphere

Washington, Tue, 24 Nov 2009 ANI

Washington, November 24 (ANI): Using geochemical clues from rocks nearly 3 billion years old, a group of scientists have made the surprising discovery that the creation of economically important nickel ore deposits was linked to sulfur in the ancient oxygen-poor atmosphere.

 

These ancient ores - specifically iron-nickel sulfide deposits - yield 10 percent of the world's annual nickel production.

 

They formed for the most part between two and three billion years ago when hot magmas erupted on the ocean floor.

 

Yet, scientists have puzzled over the origin of the rich deposits.

 

The ore minerals require sulfur to form, but neither seawater nor the magmas hosting the ores were thought to be rich enough in sulfur for this to happen.

 

"These nickel deposits have sulfur in them arising from an atmospheric cycle in ancient times. The isotopic signal is of an anoxic atmosphere," said Doug Rumble from the Carnegie Institution's Geophysical Laboratory, a co-author of the research paper.

 

Rumble, with lead author Andrey Bekker and four other colleagues used advanced geochemical techniques to analyze rock samples from major ore deposits in Australia and Canada.

 

They found that to help produce the ancient deposits, sulfur atoms made a complicated journey from volcanic eruptions, to the atmosphere, to seawater, to hot springs on the ocean floor, and finally to molten, ore-producing magmas.

 

The key evidence came from a form of sulfur known as sulfur-33, an isotope in which atoms contain one more neutron than "normal" sulfur (sulfur-32).

 

Both isotopes act the same in most chemical reactions, but reactions in the atmosphere in which sulfur dioxide gas molecules are split by ultraviolet light (UV) rays cause the isotopes to be sorted or "fractionated" into different reaction products, creating isotopic anomalies.

 

"If there is too much oxygen in the atmosphere then not enough UV gets through and these reactions can't happen," said Rumble.

 

"So if you find these sulfur isotope anomalies in rocks of a certain age, you have information about the oxygen level in the atmosphere," he added.

 

By linking the rich nickel ores with the ancient atmosphere, the anomalies in the rock samples also answer the long-standing question regarding the source of the sulfur in the ore minerals.

 

According to Rumble, knowing this will help geologists track down new ore deposits because the presence of sulfur and other chemical factors determine whether or not a deposit will form. (ANI)

 


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