Abstract

An abiotic origin has traditionally been assumed for the arsenic minerals realgar and orpiment associated with thermal springs. Microbial precipitation of arsenic, however, has been studied in pure cultures and the isotopic composition of arsenic sulfides associated with some borate deposits suggests a biotic origin for those minerals. The aim of the present study is to demonstrate the role of bacterial arsenic precipitation in the biogeochemical cycle of arsenic in such borate deposits. For this purpose both enrichment and pure cultures were obtained from the natural arsenic minerals and the composition and isotopic signatures of the arsenic sulfide minerals precipitated by the cultures and those associated with boron deposits from an Andean salt flat in northern Chile were compared. Based on the microbiological and chemical evidence gathered, it is concluded that bacteria contributed to the formation of the arsenic minerals. This interpretation is based on the consistent association of a variety of features that strongly indicate microbial involvement in the precipitation process. These include: (1) enrichment and isolation of cultures with arsenic precipitation capacity from arsenic mineral samples, (2) high numbers of arsenic-precipitating bacteria in the Andean minerals and brines, (3) chemical and mineralogical properties of precipitates experimentally formed under biotic and abiotic conditions, (4) similarities in stoichiometry between natural and laboratory obtained minerals, and (5) the consistent depletion in δ34S values for natural versus laboratory obtained sulfides. Thus, microbial precipitation of arsenic sulfides is a geochemically relevant metabolism.

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