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Element cycling during the transition from alkaline to acidic environment in an active porphyry copper tailings impoundment, Chuquicamata, Chile
In an active tailings impoundment, we studied the evolution of freshly deposited tailings from alkaline, unoxidized to acidic, oxidized tailings tracing changes in pore water quality, mineralogy, and element pathways. The tailings originate from the giant porphyry copper deposit Chuquicamata (Chile)...
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Published in: | Journal of geochemical exploration 2014-05, Vol.140, p.23-40 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | In an active tailings impoundment, we studied the evolution of freshly deposited tailings from alkaline, unoxidized to acidic, oxidized tailings tracing changes in pore water quality, mineralogy, and element pathways. The tailings originate from the giant porphyry copper deposit Chuquicamata (Chile), and were deposited in different basins with varying times of surface exposure (0 to five years) to the hyper-arid climate in the Atacama desert.
Fresh alkaline tailings (pH9.1) had high concentrations of dissolved Na (1773mg/L), Ca (556mg/L), SO4 (2496mg/L) and Cl (1678mg/L) due to dissolution of primary gypsum, and high dissolved element concentrations in the flotation process water due to recycling of water from the tailings impoundment. High As and Mo concentrations resulted from desorption processes during the flotation, with minor contributions from As-rich river water and recycled tailings water.
After draining of free water in freshly deposited tailings, evaporation-driven capillary rise was the dominant water transport in the vadose zone. In younger tailings (up to three years), the pH decreased due to sulfide oxidation to circumneutral values (6.4–8.6). The capillary fringe reached 1m depth, where ongoing evaporation enriched Na (up to 5483mg/L), K (742mg/L), and Cl (6892mg/L). In the vadose zone above 1m, the high daily temperature amplitude resulted in condensation of pore water in the uppermost 80cm of sedimented tailings. Subsequent capillary rise depleted uppermost tailings in soluble phases and increase superficial salt precipitation (halite, gypsum and Na–K–Ca–Mg sulfates).
After four years, a 13cm thick oxidation zone with acidic pH (4.7) evolved. After five years, a well-defined oxidation zone (28cm thickness) with low pH (3.8) and high mobility of heavy metals was found (e.g., 247mg/L Fe, 177mg/L Cu, 61.8mg/L Zn). This mobility allowed transport and enrichment in the efflorescent salt crust (e.g., as Cu sulfates devilline, krohnkite and Cu-chlorides eriochalcite and atacamite), with SO4 dominantly from sulfide oxidation (−1.0 to 5.9‰ δ34S, −1.0 to 4.4‰ δ18Osulfates). Stable isotope data suggest that capillary rise from the water table reached the surface, most probably due to the reduction of pore size by precipitating secondary minerals, decreased water loss by clogging of pores and heat isolation by the efflorescent salt crust.
The cycles of surface exposure and new tailings deposition in the last decades resulted in buried former oxidatio |
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ISSN: | 0375-6742 1879-1689 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.gexplo.2014.01.013 |