Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Pyrite and the Global Environment
View through CrossRef
The two basic processes concerning pyrite in the environment are the formation of pyrite, which usually involves reduction of sulfate to sulfide, and the destruction of pyrite, which usually involves oxidation of sulfide to sulfate. On an ideal planet these two processes might be exactly balanced. But pyrite is buried in sediments sometimes for hundreds of millions of years, and the sulfur in this buried pyrite is removed from the system, so the balance is disturbed. The lack of balance between sulfide oxidation and sulfate reduction powers a global dynamic cycle for sulfur. This would be complex enough if this were the whole story. However, as we have seen, both the reduction and oxidation arms of the global cycle are essentially biological—specifically microbiological—processes. This means that there is an intrinsic link between the sulfur cycle and life on Earth. In this chapter, we examine the central role that pyrite plays, and has played, in determining the surface environment of the planet. In doing so we reveal how pyrite, the humble iron sulfide mineral, is a key component of maintaining and developing life on Earth. In Chapter 4 we concluded that Mother Nature must be particularly fond of pyrite framboids: a thousand billion of these microscopic raspberry-like spheres are formed in sediments every second. If we translate this into sulfur production, some 60 million tons of sulfur is buried as pyrite in sediments each year. But this is only a fraction of the total amount of sulfide produced every year by sulfate-reducing bacteria. In 1982 the Danish geomicrobiologist Bo Barker Jørgensen discovered that as much as 90% of the sulfide produced by sulfate-reducing bacteria was rapidly reoxidized by sulfur-oxidizing microorganisms. Sulfate-reducing microorganisms actually produce about 300 million tons of sulfur each year, but about 240 million tons is reoxidized. The magnitude of the sulfide production by sulfate-reducing bacteria can be appreciated by comparison with the sulfur produced by volcanoes. As discussed in Chapter 5, it was previously supposed that all sulfur, and thus pyrite, had a volcanic origin. In fact volcanoes produce just 10 million tons of sulfur each year.
Title: Pyrite and the Global Environment
Description:
The two basic processes concerning pyrite in the environment are the formation of pyrite, which usually involves reduction of sulfate to sulfide, and the destruction of pyrite, which usually involves oxidation of sulfide to sulfate.
On an ideal planet these two processes might be exactly balanced.
But pyrite is buried in sediments sometimes for hundreds of millions of years, and the sulfur in this buried pyrite is removed from the system, so the balance is disturbed.
The lack of balance between sulfide oxidation and sulfate reduction powers a global dynamic cycle for sulfur.
This would be complex enough if this were the whole story.
However, as we have seen, both the reduction and oxidation arms of the global cycle are essentially biological—specifically microbiological—processes.
This means that there is an intrinsic link between the sulfur cycle and life on Earth.
In this chapter, we examine the central role that pyrite plays, and has played, in determining the surface environment of the planet.
In doing so we reveal how pyrite, the humble iron sulfide mineral, is a key component of maintaining and developing life on Earth.
In Chapter 4 we concluded that Mother Nature must be particularly fond of pyrite framboids: a thousand billion of these microscopic raspberry-like spheres are formed in sediments every second.
If we translate this into sulfur production, some 60 million tons of sulfur is buried as pyrite in sediments each year.
But this is only a fraction of the total amount of sulfide produced every year by sulfate-reducing bacteria.
In 1982 the Danish geomicrobiologist Bo Barker Jørgensen discovered that as much as 90% of the sulfide produced by sulfate-reducing bacteria was rapidly reoxidized by sulfur-oxidizing microorganisms.
Sulfate-reducing microorganisms actually produce about 300 million tons of sulfur each year, but about 240 million tons is reoxidized.
The magnitude of the sulfide production by sulfate-reducing bacteria can be appreciated by comparison with the sulfur produced by volcanoes.
As discussed in Chapter 5, it was previously supposed that all sulfur, and thus pyrite, had a volcanic origin.
In fact volcanoes produce just 10 million tons of sulfur each year.
Related Results
Oxidation of pyrite: Consequences and significance
Oxidation of pyrite: Consequences and significance
This paper presents the most important studies on the oxidation of pyrite particularly in aqueous solutions. The consequences of pyrite oxidation was examined, as well as its impor...
Re–Os Pyrite Geochronological Evidence of Three Mineralization Styles within the Jinchang Gold Deposit, Yanji–Dongning Metallogenic Belt, Northeast China
Re–Os Pyrite Geochronological Evidence of Three Mineralization Styles within the Jinchang Gold Deposit, Yanji–Dongning Metallogenic Belt, Northeast China
The Jinchang gold deposit is located in the eastern Yanji–Dongning Metallogenic Belt in Northeast China. The orebodies of the deposit are hosted within granite, diorite, and granod...
Insights from atom probe tomography into Carlin type gold mineralization
Insights from atom probe tomography into Carlin type gold mineralization
<div>
<p>Carlin-type gold (CTG) mineralization is one the best studied, yet poorly understood gold mineralization styles in the world. These deposits oc...
Chalcopyrite Dissolution at 650 mV and 750 mV in the Presence of Pyrite
Chalcopyrite Dissolution at 650 mV and 750 mV in the Presence of Pyrite
The dissolution of chalcopyrite in association with pyrite in mine waste results in the severe environmental issue of acid and metalliferous drainage (AMD). To better understand ch...
The Effect of Carbon Defects in the Coal–Pyrite Vacancy on the Electronic Structure and Optical Properties: A DFT + U Study
The Effect of Carbon Defects in the Coal–Pyrite Vacancy on the Electronic Structure and Optical Properties: A DFT + U Study
Pyrite is a mineral often associated with coal in coal seams and is a major source of sulfur in coal. Coal–pyrite is widely distributed, easily available, low-cost, and non-toxic, ...
Pyrite and the Origins of Life
Pyrite and the Origins of Life
If you have been reading this book since the beginning, you will not be surprised by now to find that you have come across a chapter documenting the involvement of pyrite in the or...
Source and evolution of the Luanling gold deposit in the Xiong'ershan region, western Henan Province: Constraints from pyrite trace elements, in situ sulfur isotopes, and He–Ar isotopes
Source and evolution of the Luanling gold deposit in the Xiong'ershan region, western Henan Province: Constraints from pyrite trace elements, in situ sulfur isotopes, and He–Ar isotopes
The Luanling gold deposit is a lode gold deposit in the Xiong'ershan region located on the southern margin of the North China Craton. Based on typical mineral assemblages and relat...
Acid mine drainage prevention by suppression of pyrite oxidation with iron-phosphate coating on pyrite surfaces
Acid mine drainage prevention by suppression of pyrite oxidation with iron-phosphate coating on pyrite surfaces
This study was aimed to examine the feasibility and determining the optimum condition of creating an iron-phosphate coating on pyrite surfaces for inhibiting pyrite oxidation and p...

