Les Inscriptions à la Bibliothèque sont ouvertes en
ligne via le site: https://biblio.enp.edu.dz
Les Réinscriptions se font à :
• La Bibliothèque Annexe pour les étudiants en
2ème Année CPST
• La Bibliothèque Centrale pour les étudiants en Spécialités
A partir de cette page vous pouvez :
Retourner au premier écran avec les recherches... |
Détail de l'auteur
Auteur H. Kucha
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheMicrobial sphalerite formation in carbonate-hosted Zn-Pb ores, Bleiberg, Austria / H. Kucha in Economic geology, Vol. 105 N° 5 (Août 2010)
[article]
in Economic geology > Vol. 105 N° 5 (Août 2010) . - pp. 1005-1023
Titre : Microbial sphalerite formation in carbonate-hosted Zn-Pb ores, Bleiberg, Austria : micro- to nanotextural and sulfur isotope evidence Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : H. Kucha, Auteur ; E. Schroll, Auteur ; J. G. Raith, Auteur Année de publication : 2011 Article en page(s) : pp. 1005-1023 Note générale : Economic geology Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Zn-Pb ores Sulfur isotope Austria Index. décimale : 553 Géologie économique. Minérographie. Minéraux. Formation et gisements de minerais Résumé : Microglobular sphalerite (90–180 μm) is a major form of sphalerite in the abandoned, Triassic carbonate-hosted Zn-Pb deposit at Bleiberg, Austria. It is common in ores from the Crest horizon and the first Cardita horizon, which contain about 0.5- to 3-mm-thick and up to 5-cm-long, wavy, discontinuous, sphalerite-rich bands composed of agglomerations of microglobular sphalerite. Based on comparisons with modern environments, these textures are interpreted as peloids and probably represent fossil microbial mats. These are inter-layered with carbonate- and marcasite-rich, as well as finely banded, sphalerite layers (±fibrous galena and relics of oxysulfides), resulting in the characteristic rhythmically banded macrotexture of these Zn-dominated ores.
Microbial nanotextures, made visible by field emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM) after etching, include sphalerite nanospheres (10–90 nm) and bacterial filaments. The sphalerite nanospheres are identical to those previously reported for mixed calcite-sphalerite peloids from Bleiberg and are very similar to nanotextures observed in recent bacterial biofilms made by Desulfobacteriaceae. The observed sphalerite nanospheres are interpreted as in situ metabolic products of sulfate-reducing bacteria. Micro- and nanotextures suggest that the larger, μm-sized sphalerite globules formed by agglomeration of sphalerite nanospheres, as well as by replacement of peloids representing former bacterial colonies; the latter are now composed of Zn-calcite cores surounded by serrated sphalerite rims. Most samples studied evidence recrystallization of sphalerite that is broadly coeval with formation of fluorite.
Involvement of sulfate-reducing bacteria in the formation of this early sphalerite mineralization is supported by sulfur isotope data. Sphalerite is generally characterized by isotopic light sulfur with δ34S per mil values ranging from −30.5 to −20.3 per mil. The most negative sulfur isotope values are recorded from sphalerite (−30.5‰, −30.2‰) and galena with unusual fibrous to dendritic morphology (−31.9‰; −31.8‰); both are associated with oxysulfides. Microglobular sphalerite with well-preserved sphalerite globules has a δ34S value of −28.8 to −28.2 per mil; colloform sphalerite (schalenblende) ranges from −29.0 to −25.0 per mil. Microglobular sphalerite associated with fine-grained fluorite and euhedral sphalerite formed through recrystallization processes show a trend to less negative values; i.e., −26.3 to −22.2 per mil and −22.9 to −20.3 per mil, respectively. We suggest that the combined biogenic nano- to macrotextures and sulfur isotope data are evidence that microbes played a key role in formation of Alpine carbonate-hosted Zn-Pb deposits. Results of this study contradict the MVT model suggested for Alpine Pb-Zn deposits, which calls for formation of Pb-Zn mineralization during late diagenetic burial in the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic.DEWEY : 553 ISSN : 0361-0128 En ligne : http://econgeol.geoscienceworld.org/content/105/5/1005.abstract [article] Microbial sphalerite formation in carbonate-hosted Zn-Pb ores, Bleiberg, Austria : micro- to nanotextural and sulfur isotope evidence [texte imprimé] / H. Kucha, Auteur ; E. Schroll, Auteur ; J. G. Raith, Auteur . - 2011 . - pp. 1005-1023.
Economic geology
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Economic geology > Vol. 105 N° 5 (Août 2010) . - pp. 1005-1023
Mots-clés : Zn-Pb ores Sulfur isotope Austria Index. décimale : 553 Géologie économique. Minérographie. Minéraux. Formation et gisements de minerais Résumé : Microglobular sphalerite (90–180 μm) is a major form of sphalerite in the abandoned, Triassic carbonate-hosted Zn-Pb deposit at Bleiberg, Austria. It is common in ores from the Crest horizon and the first Cardita horizon, which contain about 0.5- to 3-mm-thick and up to 5-cm-long, wavy, discontinuous, sphalerite-rich bands composed of agglomerations of microglobular sphalerite. Based on comparisons with modern environments, these textures are interpreted as peloids and probably represent fossil microbial mats. These are inter-layered with carbonate- and marcasite-rich, as well as finely banded, sphalerite layers (±fibrous galena and relics of oxysulfides), resulting in the characteristic rhythmically banded macrotexture of these Zn-dominated ores.
Microbial nanotextures, made visible by field emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM) after etching, include sphalerite nanospheres (10–90 nm) and bacterial filaments. The sphalerite nanospheres are identical to those previously reported for mixed calcite-sphalerite peloids from Bleiberg and are very similar to nanotextures observed in recent bacterial biofilms made by Desulfobacteriaceae. The observed sphalerite nanospheres are interpreted as in situ metabolic products of sulfate-reducing bacteria. Micro- and nanotextures suggest that the larger, μm-sized sphalerite globules formed by agglomeration of sphalerite nanospheres, as well as by replacement of peloids representing former bacterial colonies; the latter are now composed of Zn-calcite cores surounded by serrated sphalerite rims. Most samples studied evidence recrystallization of sphalerite that is broadly coeval with formation of fluorite.
Involvement of sulfate-reducing bacteria in the formation of this early sphalerite mineralization is supported by sulfur isotope data. Sphalerite is generally characterized by isotopic light sulfur with δ34S per mil values ranging from −30.5 to −20.3 per mil. The most negative sulfur isotope values are recorded from sphalerite (−30.5‰, −30.2‰) and galena with unusual fibrous to dendritic morphology (−31.9‰; −31.8‰); both are associated with oxysulfides. Microglobular sphalerite with well-preserved sphalerite globules has a δ34S value of −28.8 to −28.2 per mil; colloform sphalerite (schalenblende) ranges from −29.0 to −25.0 per mil. Microglobular sphalerite associated with fine-grained fluorite and euhedral sphalerite formed through recrystallization processes show a trend to less negative values; i.e., −26.3 to −22.2 per mil and −22.9 to −20.3 per mil, respectively. We suggest that the combined biogenic nano- to macrotextures and sulfur isotope data are evidence that microbes played a key role in formation of Alpine carbonate-hosted Zn-Pb deposits. Results of this study contradict the MVT model suggested for Alpine Pb-Zn deposits, which calls for formation of Pb-Zn mineralization during late diagenetic burial in the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic.DEWEY : 553 ISSN : 0361-0128 En ligne : http://econgeol.geoscienceworld.org/content/105/5/1005.abstract