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    | Titel | Evidence for vivianite formation and its contribution to long-term phosphorus retention in a recent lake sediment: a novel analytical approach |  
    | VerfasserIn | M. Rothe, T. Frederichs, M. Eder, A. Kleeberg, M. Hupfer |  
    | Medientyp | Artikel 
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    | Sprache | Englisch 
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    | ISSN | 1726-4170 
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    | Digitales Dokument | URL |  
    | Erschienen | In: Biogeosciences ; 11, no. 18 ; Nr. 11, no. 18 (2014-09-26), S.5169-5180 |  
    | Datensatznummer | 250117610 
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    | Publikation (Nr.) |  copernicus.org/bg-11-5169-2014.pdf |  
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        | Zusammenfassung |  
        | Vivianite, Fe3(PO4)2 · 8 H2O, is a ferrous iron
  phosphate mineral which forms in waterlogged soils and
  sediments. The phosphorus (P) bound in its crystal lattice is
  considered to be immobilised because vivianite is stable under
  anoxic, reducing, sedimentary conditions. Thus, vivianite formation
  can make a major contribution to P retention during early
  diagenesis. Much remains unknown about vivianite in sediments,
  because technical challenges have rendered direct identification and
  quantification difficult. To identify vivianite and assess its
  significance for P burial during early diagenesis we studied the
  consequences of a 1992/1993 in-lake application of FeCl3 and
  Fe(OH)3 aimed at restoring Lake Groß-Glienicke (Berlin,
  Germany). In a novel approach, we firstly applied a heavy-liquid
  separation to the iron-rich surface sediments which allowed direct
  identification of vivianite by X-ray diffraction in the high-density
  (ρ > 2.3 g cm−3) sediment fraction. Secondly, we
  assessed the contribution of vivianite to P retention, combining
  results from chemical digestion with magnetic susceptibility data
  derived from magnetic hysteresis measurements. Scanning electron
  microscopy revealed that the dark blue spherical vivianite nodules
  were 40–180 μm in diameter, and formed of platy- and
  needle-shaped crystal aggregates. Although equilibrium calculations
  indicated supersaturation of vivianite throughout the upper
  30 cm of the sediment, the vivianite deposits were
  homogeneously distributed within, and restricted to, the upper
  23 cm only. Thus, supersaturated pore water alone cannot
  serve as a reliable predictor for the in situ formation of
  vivianite. In Lake Groß -Glienicke, vivianite formation continues
  to be triggered by the artificial iron amendment more than
  20 yr ago, significantly contributing to P retention in
  surface sediments. |  
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