Abstract

Compared with pit lakes originated by coal mining, little is known about in-lake neutralization processes in pit lakes from sulfide ore mining in hard rock substrates, which are typically very deep and acidic and receive low carbon (C) inputs and groundwater flows. Physicochemical processes in water and sediments from a pit lake (San Telmo, 130m deep) in the Iberian Pyrite Belt were investigated. San Telmo is a meromictic and highly acidic (pH2.8) pit lake due to pH buffering by precipitation of Fe(III) minerals (schwertmannite and jarosite). The sediments have a low abundance of C (below 0.60%) and iron minerals (below 0.12%) compared to most coal-mining pit lakes. In San Telmo sediments, iron reduction and sulfide oxidation may be thermodynamically favored due to low pH values in pore waters (below 3.8) and the presence of reactive iron. Although schwertmannite is the main ferric mineral precipitating in the water column, mineralogical analyses reveal a low abundance of schwertmannite in the sediment. This may be due to the preferential use of this mineral in reduction reactions mediated by bacteria, together with a low replenishment rate of the schwertmannite pool in the sediment. The transformation of reactive iron (schwertmannite and jarosite) into goethite may limit sulfate reduction, promoting acidic conditions in the sediment. As long as the acid mine drainage continues to discharge into the lake, the pH buffering exerted by ferric minerals in the sediments will limit the neutralization of the pH by sulfate reduction.

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