Northeastern Section - 44th Annual Meeting (22–24 March 2009)

Paper No. 3
Presentation Time: 1:00 PM-5:00 PM

A TEST OF REFLECTANCE SPECTROSCOPY AS A PROXY FOR HEMATITE CONCENTRATIONS IN SYNTHETIC AND NATURAL SAMPLES


TUCKER, William C., Environmental Sciences Program, Trinity College, 300 Summit St, Hartford, CT 06106 and GEISS, Christoph E., Physics, Trinity College, McCook Hall 105, 300 Summit St, Hartford, CT 06106, william.tucker@trincoll.edu

Sediment color is often used to quantify the abundance of weakly magnetic iron minerals, such as hematite or goethite in sediments and soils. Most studies, however, use mixtures of synthetic hematite and an iron-free matrix to calibrate the results of spectroscopic analyses. Such calibrations may be problematic as the color of hematite depends critically on crystallite size. We produced synthetic hematite using two methods outlined by (Schwertmann and Cornell, 1991) and produced standards with hematite concentrations ranging between 1 and 7 wt % and analyzed ten natural soil and sediment samples from New England, Iceland and Minnesota. Color analyses succeed in reconstructing hematite abundances in synthetic samples but yield semi-quantitative results at best for our natural sample set, allowing for the detection of relative changes in hematite abundance but making truly quantitative analyses problematic.

Schwertmann, U., and Cornell, R. M. (1991). "Iron Oxides in the Laboratory." VCH Verlagsgesellschaft, Weinheim.