Occurrence Of Organic Carbon In Mississippi Valley Deposits And An Evaluation Of Processes Involving Organic Carbon In The Genesis Of These Deposits

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Charles S. Spirakis
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
8
File Size:
395 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2013

Abstract

The consistent occurrence of organic carbon early in the paragenesis of Mississippi Valley-type sulfide deposits suggests a genetic link between organic carbon and the sulfide ores. Reduction of sulfate in the mineralizing solution by organic carbon at the sites of mineralization is commonly proposed as the precipitation mechanism for these deposits, but inorganic sulfate reduction is too slow to be important to the chemistry of the ore zone, and bacteria, which catalyze sulfate reduction at low temperatures, are not known to survive at the temperatures of mineralization. Sulfate reduction with or without bacteria is not consistent with the sulfur Isotope evidence. Sulfur isotope studies also indicate that the derivation of sulfur from hydrocarbon at the sites of mineralization is unlikely. Organometallic complexing may be involved in the transport of metals, but no plausible mechanism for breaking these complexes at the sites of mineralization has been proposed. Reduction of partly oxidized sulfur species in the mineralizing solution by organic carbon at the sites of mineralization is a possibility which deserves further scrutiny.
Citation

APA: Charles S. Spirakis  (2013)  Occurrence Of Organic Carbon In Mississippi Valley Deposits And An Evaluation Of Processes Involving Organic Carbon In The Genesis Of These Deposits

MLA: Charles S. Spirakis Occurrence Of Organic Carbon In Mississippi Valley Deposits And An Evaluation Of Processes Involving Organic Carbon In The Genesis Of These Deposits. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2013.

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