16 research outputs found
Geochemistry and electron spin resonance of hydrothermal dickite (Nowa Ruda, Lower Silesia, Poland): vanadium and chromium
Geochemical analyses for trace V and Cr have been done on a representative sample of a typical hydrothermal
dickite/kaolinite filling vein at Nowa Ruda. The mineralogy of the sample is comparatively simple, dickite being the
principal component (ca. 91 % of the total sample). Geochemical fractionation and inductively coupled plasma-optical
emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) indicate that most ( > 90 % of total metal) of the V and Cr reside in the dickite. Electron
Spin Resonance (ESR) shows that most ( > 70 %) of the V in the dickite structure is in the form of vanadyl (VO2+) ions. A
high concentration of Cr3+ is also detected in this structure by ESR. The combination of geochemical and spectroscopic
tools applied to VO2+ and Cr3+ allow one to specify the Eh ( > 0.4 V, highly oxidizing) and pH ( 4.0, highly acidic) of the
solution during the formation of dickite from the Nowa Ruda Basin. Substantial proportions of the V and Cr (as well as
VO2+ and Cr3+) in the dickite structure were probably contained in an original hydrothermal acid water. We suggest that
hot hydrothermal waters leached the surrounding varieties of gabbroids enriched in V and Cr for the dickite-forming
solution. The results of this work have shown V and Cr are potentially reliable indicators for geochemical characterization
of the physicochemical conditions of their formation. The bulk-rock V/Cr ratio in hydrothermal dickites and kaolinites
from Nowa Ruda, Sonoma (California, USA), Cigar Lake (Saskatchewan, Canada) and TesliÄ (Bosnia and Hercegovina)
is also briefly explored here as a potential tracer of redox state during their formation