Pyrite formation in marshes during early diagenesis
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Geomicrobiology Journal
- Vol. 6 (2) , 77-97
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01490458809377827
Abstract
Pyrite was removed from peat cores by draining the sediments and allowing the pyrite to oxidize. Then the peat cores were placed back into intertidal salt marsh sediments to incubate. Pyrite accumulated rapidly in peat incubated in situ. A greater accumulation of pyrite was observed in peat that contained living grass than peat in which the grass had been killed. Resin‐imbedded samples of peat from nearby sediments showed that small single crystals of pyrite were abundant, supporting the idea that pyrite in marshes forms rapidly through direct precipitation. Pyrite was also observed filling vascular channels in roots. It had been proposed that pyrite fills root channels in freshwater environments where the primary sulfur source used by sulfate‐reducing bacteria is organic sulfur rather than sulfate. The widespread occurrence of pyrite filling vascular channels in salt marsh peat makes it unlikely that pyrite morphology can be used to infer the salinity of the overlying water. Marsh sediments are characterized by higher carbon/sulfur ratios and pyritization (Fe‐pyritel(Fe‐pyrite + Fe‐HCl)) indices than marine subtidal sediments. Within wide ranges these indices do not seem to be very sensitive to salinity of flooding water or carbon concentrations in sediments. Oxidation and iron availability appear to be the major controls on pyrite accumulation in marshes. While pyrite concentrations in submerged sediments can be used as indicators of relative rates of sulfate reduction, sulfur storage in intertidal marsh sediments is not as tightly linked to this microbial process.Keywords
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