Abstract

ABSTRACT The Glenorchy area of northwest Otago consists of a low-relief Holocene fluvial delta complex below glaciated mountains of Otago Schist basement, and has locally elevated arsenic (As) from two geogenic pathways: Mesozoic hydrothermal processes and Holocene shallow groundwater transport. Soils on the delta complex are primitive and contain abundant sand and silt derived from unoxidised schist basement, with background As contents generally <30 mg/kg. Some soils in wetland areas on the delta have naturally elevated (geogenic) arsenic contents that are locally >300 mg/kg on the cm2 scale. Arsenic enrichment has occurred in the upper 30 cm where dissolved As and Fe from low-redox chemical conditions in shallow groundwater has become oxidised, thereby lowering their solubility. Both As and Fe are being mobilised from background sulfide minerals in schist-derived debris, and groundwater As concentrations up to 0.8 mg/L have been recorded. Historic mining of scheelite for tungsten on the surrounding mountains has exposed small volumes (typically tens to hundreds of m3) of arsenopyrite-bearing mine wastes with spot As contents from <500 to >10 000 mg/kg. Water discharging from mine adits have pH∼8 and dissolved As up to 0.3 mg/L, but these waters are rapidly diluted downstream to <0.02 mg/L.

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