Historical variations in the isotopic composition of atmospheric zinc deposition from a zinc smelter

2008 
Abstract In order to test the usefulness of stable zinc isotopes as an atmospheric source tracer, we analyzed the zinc isotopic composition of two sediment cores, taken at 1 km distance of the former zinc smelter in Lommel, Belgium. The peat bog lake sediments accumulate mainly atmospheric particles, have high organic matter contents (12–60 wt.%), are anoxic and highly contaminated with heavy metals (up to 4.7 wt.% Zn, and 1.1 wt.% Pb) with a sulfide mineralogical control on mobility. Down core variations in δ 66 Zn (relative to the JMC 3-0749L standard) were small, ranging from + 0.07‰ to + 0.39‰, but are nevertheless eight times the external reproducibility of 0.04‰. Good agreement was found between the two cores, and despite 30% Zn mobilization to deeper layers, no evidence of associated diagenetic Zn isotope fractionation was found. Sediments deposited in the early 20th century have δ 66 Zn of + 0.30‰ ± 0.05‰ (2SD, n  = 5) and a shift takes place between 1945 and 1950 to δ 66 Zn values of + 0.14‰ ± 0.09‰ (2SD, n  = 7) in the 2nd half of the century. In order to understand this shift in δ 66 Zn we analyzed 32 ore-grade sphalerite (ZnS) samples from African, Australian and European origin. Together with 29 published δ 66 Zn values for ore-grade ZnS, we find remarkably homogeneous isotopic compositions, which when averaged for mining location gives δ 66 Zn of + 0.16‰ ± 0.20‰ (2SD, n  = 10 mines, n  = 61 analyses). Early 20th century Zn deposition with δ 66 Zn of +0.30‰ is significantly different (p  66 Zn of +0.16‰. We suggest that this reflects the presence of an atmospheric smelting residue (slag) component, enriched in the heavy Zn isotopes due to Rayleigh type fractionation during Zn refining.
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