MICROBIAL VS. ABIOTIC OXIDATIVE WEATHERING OF BASALTIC GLASSES: NEW APPROACHES FOR PROBING THE INITIAL STAGES OF DISSOLUTION
One novel approach we have developed is the use of Synchrotron-based x-ray reflectivity and spectroscopy measurements to (1) measure the density and thickness of the leached layers that form on the glass surfaces (at a 10-angstrom scale resolution) (2) obtain distribution profiles for a variety of elements (e.g. Fe, Mn, Ca, Ti) in the surface layers vs. the bulk glasses and (3) monitor changes in the redox state of Fe as a function of depth into the substrate during oxidative weathering of the glasses. To date, we have incubated a series of highly polished basaltic glass surfaces in artificial seawater media at 10°C, where one subset of glasses is inoculated with the Fe-oxidizer consortia (which leads to rapid biofilm formation) and the remainder serve as abiotic controls. Measurable reaction (10s to 100s angstroms) occurs within the first few weeks, accompanied by Fe-oxidation in the surface layers. Modeling of x-ray reflectivity profiles from the biotically-altered surfaces shows that the reacted layer thickness is up to 3-times greater than the abiotic surfaces over the same time period. In addition, fitting of Fe XANES spectra shows that a Fe(III)-front propagates at a much faster rate into the biologically-colonized glasses. Quantitative comparisons between experiments conducted on weeks to several month timescales will be presented.