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Published September 1, 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Simulated diagenesis of the iron-silica precipitates in banded iron formations

  • 1. ROR icon University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Banded iron formations (BIF) are chemically precipitated sediments that can record Archean ocean geochemistry. BIFs are laminated silica- and iron-rich deposits that host a range of iron(II, III) minerals, including hematite, magnetite, siderite, greenalite, minnesotaite, and stilpnomelane. This diverse mineralogical assemblage reflects secondary mineralization reactions due to diagenesis and/or post-depositional alteration. While petrographic observations of BIFs sparingly contain the iron silicate greenalite, recent evidence of greenalite nanoparticles preserved in early-mineralizing BIF chert suggest this mineral was a primary phase in BIF progenitor sediments. Therefore, it is critical to investigate the formation and alteration of greenalite to constrain the Archean ocean environment and help unravel post-depositional processes. To examine how iron silicates precipitate and then crystallize and/or transform during diagenesis, we simulated these two processes under Archean ocean conditions. We first precipitated a poorly ordered Fe-rich serpentine with subsidiary ferrihydrite at neutral pH by performing in situ Fe(II) oxidation experiments at 25 °C in the presence of silica. Subjected to simulated diagenesis at 80 °C, the rudimentary Fe-phyllosilicate transformed into a crystalline phyllosilicate characterized as 30% cronstedtite and 70% greenalite accompanied by magnetite and persistent ferrihydrite. At temperatures ≤150 °C, we continued to observe ferrihydrite, increased magnetite formation, and elevated incorporation of Mg into the phyllosilicate as it further recrystallized into Mg-greenalite. Our findings demonstrate a possible formation mechanism of early silicates through partial Fe(II) oxidation and support petrographic observations that magnetite likely mineralizes during diagenesis. Additionally, we suggest that Mg contents in BIF iron phyllosilicates could serve as a tracer for diagenesis, with Mg signaling phyllosilicate-fluid interactions at elevated temperatures. Ultimately, our experiments help reveal how initial iron-silica coprecipitates are altered during diagenesis, providing novel insights into the interpretation of greenalite and magnetite in ancient BIF assemblages.

Copyright and License

© 2023 by the Mineralogical Society of America. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Acknowledgement

We are grateful to Ben Tutolo, Aude Picard, AE Warren Huff, and our lab group for their helpful feedback on this manuscript. We especially thank David Diercks (Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado, U.S.A.) for assistance with TEM imaging and analyses and Victoria Jarvis (McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada) for performing the Co-XRD measurements.

Funding

We acknowledge funding from NASA Exobiology (J.E.J., Award 80NSSC18K1060) and NSF Geobiology and Low-Temperature Geochemistry (J.E.J., Award 2142509) that supported this work.

Data Availability

Raw data associated with this publication can be found at https://doi. org/10.5281/zenodo.8173213.

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Additional details

Created:
December 12, 2024
Modified:
December 12, 2024