Arsenic was found to be mainly enriched in Fe oxy-hydroxide coatings along with other heavy metals resulting in high correlations. Phosphate leached 34–66 % of As from the studied grains. The release of As in this leaching step was accompanied by the disappearance of correlations between As and Fe as well as by a higher Fe/As ratio compared to untreated samples. During the Fe-leaching step the coatings were largely dissolved leading to much lower concentrations of As and Fe. The correlation between As and Fe was preserved only in association with K, indicating the presence of both elements in silicate structures.
Several distinctive features were observed such as the release of Fe, Mn and Cr during phosphate leaching as well as the lowering of mean K concentrations due to the Fe-leaching which indicates that not only target mineral phases were dissolved in these extraction steps. The importance of re-precipitation processes during sequential extraction was indicated by a consistently observed increase of the Fe/As ratio from the untreated to the Fe-leached samples.