4.7 Article

Importance of atmospheric inputs and Fe-oxides in controlling soil uranium budgets and behavior along a Hawaiian chronosequence

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 244, Issue 3-4, Pages 691-707

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2007.07.016

Keywords

uranium; Hawaii; soil; trace elements; chronosequence; mineral aerosol

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A long-term budget of uranium calculated for a chronosequence of Hawaiian soils demonstrates the importance of mineral aerosol deposition as a geochemical pathway. A series of sequential extractions on the same soils shows a strong association between Fe-oxides and uranium, especially the amorphous and poorly-crystalline Fe-oxides present in intermediate-age soils (20 and 150 ka). Despite intense leaching conditions, soil U contents were found to increase between 20-fold and 60-fold with age along the chronosequence, from 9 to 17 mu g cm(-2) at 0.3 ka sites to 344-543 mu g cm(-2) at the 4100 ka site. An open-system transport function comparing U to an index least mobile element (Nb) was used to calculate U gains or losses from the soils, relative to the input from parent material weathering. Results show small losses or small gains (+/- 25%) of U occurred in soils 150 ka and younger, while gains of up to 531% U occurred in soils older than 150 ka, highlighting the importance of mineral aerosol (dust) deposition at the older sites. In the 4100 ka soil, the ratio of dust-derived U inputs to parent material-derived U inputs is approximately 6. Sequential extractions show that between 0.1% and 1.2% of the total U in the soils was extracted with ammonium acetate, indicating that very little U exists as exchangeable cations. A second extraction employing citrate-dithionate and hydroxylamine hydrochloride was performed to extract U associated with Fe-oxides. Average percent occurrences for U in the Fe-oxide extraction for each profile are, 7% at 0.3 ka, 53% at 20 ka, 40% at 150 ka, and 17% at 4100 ka, illustrating an increase with age to 20 ka followed by a subsequent decline. This parallels the trend observed in amorphous Fe-oxide content, suggesting that adsorption on amorphous Fe-oxides is the dominant control on U in the intermediate-age soils. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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