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Behavior of Re and Os during low-temperature alteration: Results from Himalayan soils and altered black shales
Authors:Anne-Catherine Pierson-Wickmann  Laurie ReisbergChristian France-Lanord
Institution:a Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et Géochimiques, 15, rue Notre-Dame des Pauvres, BP 20, F-54501 Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, France
Abstract:Re-Os analyses were performed on five soil profiles developed on silicate lithologies in the Narayani drainage basin of the Himalayas, as well as on several altered black shales and associated alteration phases. The results indicate that all of these samples have lost large amounts of Re. This Re loss approached 100% in the black shale-derived soils, which also most probably lost substantial quantities of Os. The near constancy of Os and Re concentrations with depth indicates that this loss occurred quite early in the alteration process, rather than progressively during the course of soil development. A slight decrease in 187Os/188Os was observed toward the surface of the two black shale soil profiles, possibly indicating a minor preferential mobility of radiogenic 187Os for this lithology. In the black shale-derived saprolite and soils, the loss of Re and Os was related to the loss of organic carbon. The importance of this phase is underscored by the fact that organic material separated from a black shale sample accounted for nearly all of the Os contained in the whole rock. Analysis of alteration phases from the surface of a weathered black shale showed that Os liberated during alteration was partially reprecipitated in Fe oxides, with Os isotopic compositions very similar to that of the original rock, whereas Re was removed with the fluid phase.These results demonstrate the disproportionately large role that black shale weathering may play in determining the Re and Os contents of continental runoff and, thus, ultimately of seawater, but they also emphasize the possible complexity of this process. The data suggest that a large fraction of the Os contained in black shales is released during chemical alteration, which is apparently not the case for most other silicate rocks. Therefore, the potential contribution of black shales to the dissolved Os budget of runoff and river water may be even greater than that expected from the high Os concentrations of these rocks. The extent to which this Os will affect the seawater Os composition depends on how efficiently it is recaptured by secondary phases such as Fe-Mn oxides in situ or during transport. These results also underscore the high mobility of Re with respect to Os at every stage in the erosional process, thus explaining the order of magnitude increase in Re/Os ratio from the black shale source rocks to seawater.
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