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Aquatic Geochemistry | 2003

Iron and Sulfur Chemistry in a Stratified Lake: Evidence for Iron-Rich Sulfide Complexes

George W. LutherIII; Brian T. Glazer; Shufen Ma; Robert E. Trouwborst; Bradley R. Shultz; Gregory K. Druschel; Charoenwan Kraiya

A four month study of a man-made lake used for hydroelectric power generation in northeastern Pennsylvania USA was conducted to investigate seasonal anoxia and the effects of sulfide species being transported downstream of the power generation equipment. Water column analyses show that the system is iron-rich compared to sulfide. Total Fe(II) concentrations in the hypolimnion are typically at least twice the total sulfide levels. In situ voltammetric analyses show that free Fe(II) as [Fe(H2O)6]2+ or free H2S as H2S/HS- are either not present or at trace levels and that iron-rich sulfide complexes are present. From the in situ data and total Fe(II) and H2S measurements, we infer that these iron-rich sulfide complexes may have stoichiometries such as Fe2SH3+ (or polymeric forms of this and other stoichiometries). These iron-rich sulfide complexes appear related to dissolution of the iron-rich FeS mineral, mackinawite, because IAP calculations on data from discrete bottle samples obtained from bottom waters are similar to the pKsp of mackinawite. Soluble iron-sulfide species are stable in the absence of O2 (both in lake waters and the pipeline) and transported several miles during power generation. However, iron-sulfide complexes can react with O2 to oxidize sulfide and can also dissociate releasing volatile H2S when the waters containing them are exposed to the atmosphere downstream of the powerplant. Sediment analyses show that the lake is rich in oxidized iron solids (both crystalline and amorphous). Fe concentrations in FeS solids are low (<5 μmole/grdry wt) and the pyrite concentration ranges from about equal to the solid FeS to 30 times the solid FeS concentration. The degree of pyritization is below 0.12 indicating that pyrite formation is limited by free sulfide, which can react with the iron-rich sulfide complexes.


Estuaries | 2004

The roles of anoxia, H2S, and storm events in fish kills of dead-end canals of Delaware inland bays

George W. Luther; Shufen Ma; Robert E. Trouwborst; Brian T. Glazer; Michelle Blickley; Robert W. Scarborough; Michael G. Mensinger

In 2001, the development of seasonal anoxia was studied in two waterways located at the head of Delaware’s northern inland bay, Rehoboth Bay. Bald Eagle Creek is a northern tributary of the bay, which has tidal exchange with Torquay Canal (a dead-end canal) via a short channel with a 1.4 m sill. Mean low water depth in Torquay Canal is about 2 m, but dredging produced over a dozen depressions with a total water depth of 5.5 m. During the summer of 2000, four major fish kills were reported in Torquay Canal and Bald Eagle Creek with more than 2.5 million juvenile menhaden (Brevoortia tyrannus) killed. Low O2 concentration was assumed to be the problem but production of toxic H2S is more likely. From late spring 2001, we conducted in situ determination of temperature, salinity, pH, dissolved O2, and H2S in Torquay Canal and Bald Eagle Creek. During spring, water column stratification began in the depressions with warmer and less salty water observed in the upper layer, and cooler, saltier water below 2 m. O2 was at saturation levels in the surface waters but was not detectable below 2 m by the end of May. The depressions were anoxic with H2S accumulating to mM concentrations in June. A storm event prior to July 12 mixed these two layers with a subsequent loss of H2S. The H2S levels again increased in the deep water due to stratification and reached another maximum in late August. Another storm event occurred at this time resulting in no detectable O2 and up to 400 μM H2S in surface waters. H2S appears to be the primary reason for fish kills in these tributaries. Aerators installed in Torquay Canal on June 21 had no significant effect on abating stratification and anoxic conditions beyond their immediate area.


Journal of Shellfish Research | 2008

Hydrothermal Vent Mussel Habitat Chemistry, Pre- and Post-Eruption at 9°50′North on the East Pacific Rise

Heather A. Nees; Tommy S. Moore; Katherine M. Mullaugh; Rebecca R. Holyoke; Christopher P. Janzen; Shufen Ma; Edouard Metzger; Tim J. Waite; Mustafa Yücel; Richard A. Lutz; Timothy M. Shank; Costantino Vetriani; Donald B. Nuzzio; George W. Luther

Abstract Between October 2005 and March 2006, a seafloor volcanic eruption occurred at 9°50′N East Pacific Rise (EPR), establishing a “time zero” for characterizing newly-formed hydrothermal vent habitats and comparing them to pre-eruption habitats. Before the eruption, mussels (Bathymodiolus thermophilus) formed large aggregates between 9°49.6′ and 9°50.3′N. After the eruption, the few mussels remaining were in sparsely-distributed individuals and clumps, seemingly transported via lava flows or from mass wasting of the walls of the axial trough. In situ voltammetry with solid state gold-amalgam microelectrodes was used to characterize the chemistry of vent fluids in mussel habitats from 2004 to 2007, providing data sets for comparison of oxygen, sulfide, and temperature. Posteruption fluids contained higher sulfide-to-temperature ratios (i.e., slopes of linear regressions) (10.86 μM °C−1) compared with pre-eruption values in 2004 and 2005 (2.79 μM °C−1 and −0.063 μM °C−1, respectively). These chemical differences can be attributed to the difference in geographic location in which mussels were living and physical factors arising from posteruptive fluid emissions.


Limnology and Oceanography | 2002

Iron‐sulfur‐phosphorus cycling in the sediments of a shallow coastal bay: Implications for sediment nutrient release and benthic macroalgal blooms

Tim F. Rozan; Martial Taillefert; Robert E. Trouwborst; Brian T. Glazer; Shufen Ma; Julian Herszage; Lexia M. Valdes; Kent S. Price; George W. Luther


Marine Chemistry | 2008

Use of voltammetric solid-state (micro)electrodes for studying biogeochemical processes : Laboratory measurements to real time measurements with an in situ electrochemical analyzer (ISEA)

George W. Luther; Brian T. Glazer; Shufen Ma; Robert E. Trouwborst; Tommy S. Moore; Edouard Metzger; Chareonkwan Kraiya; Tim J. Waite; Gregory K. Druschel; Bjørn Sundby; Martial Taillefert; Donald B. Nuzzio; Timothy M. Shank; Brent L. Lewis; Paul J. Brendel


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2010

Biotic and abiotic factors affecting distributions of megafauna in diffuse flow on andesite and basalt along the Eastern Lau Spreading Center, Tonga

Elizabeth L. Podowski; Shufen Ma; George W. Luther; Denice Wardrop; Charles R. Fisher


Marine Chemistry | 2007

Short-term and interannual variability of redox-sensitive chemical parameters in hypoxic/anoxic bottom waters of the Chesapeake bay

Brent L. Lewis; Brian T. Glazer; Paul Montbriand; George W. Luther; Donald B. Nuzzio; Timothy W. Deering; Shufen Ma; Stephen M. Theberge


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2006

Removal of H2S via an iron catalytic cycle and iron sulfide precipitation in the water column of dead end tributaries

Shufen Ma; Abigail Noble; Derek Butcher; Robert E. Trouwborst; George W. Luther


Electroanalysis | 2008

Voltammetric (Micro)Electrodes for the In Situ Study of Fe2+ Oxidation Kinetics in Hot Springs and S2O Production at Hydrothermal Vents

Katherine M. Mullaugh; George W. Luther; Shufen Ma; Tommy S. Moore; Mustafa Yücel; Erin L. Becker; Elizabeth L. Podowski; Charles R. Fisher; Robert E. Trouwborst; Beverly K. Pierson


Electroanalysis | 2008

Solid-State Au/Hg Microelectrode for the Investigation of Fe and Mn Cycling in a Freshwater Wetland: Implications for Methane Production

Shufen Ma; George W. Luther; Jason K. Keller; Andrew S. Madison; Edouard Metzger; David Emerson; J. Patrick Megonigal

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Brent L. Lewis

Coastal Carolina University

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Charles R. Fisher

Pennsylvania State University

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Elizabeth L. Podowski

Pennsylvania State University

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