The nature and significance of sulphate-rich, aluminous efflorescence
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  • journal_title:Mineralogical Magazine
  • Contributor:R. Martin ; K. A. Rodgers ; P. R. L. Browne
  • Publisher:Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland
  • Date:1999-
  • Format:text/html
  • Language:en
  • journal_abbrev:Mineralogical Magazine
  • issn:0026-461X
  • volume:63
  • issue:3
  • firstpage:413
  • section:Articles
摘要

Alunogen and meta-alunogen are the dominant phases present in transient sulphate efflorescences that are the latest products of the alteration of ignimbrite country rocks in the long-lived Te Kopia geothermal field. Meta-alunogen pseudomorphs alunogen and both species occur as white, fibrous, tangled masses, as prismatic, parallel growths, and as thin, platy, crystals, 8-15 mu m across, that coalesce in an open cellular network. Small (<2 mm diam.) spherical aggregates of radiating, acicular halotrichite (Fe (sub 0.51) Mg (sub 0.49) Al 2 (SO 4 ) 4 .22H 2 O), potash alum, mirabilite, melanterite and tschermigite are present locally. The cations needed to form these minerals derive from the host rocks with the exception of sulphur and ammonia that come from H 2 S and NH 3 gases ascending with steam. The particular efflorescence assemblage reflects the prevailing conditions and ionic activities of a local micro-environment. Kaolinite formed by acid sulphate alteration is now being altered by steam to yield alunogen. In turn, alunogen can react with silica, or co-dissociate with silicic acid, to form kaolinite. The alternating dissolution and reprecipitation of kaolinite and alunogen moves aluminium in and through the surficial environment at Te Kopia.

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