Metal Mobility in Embryonic-to-Proto-Ni-Laterite Profiles from Non-Tropical Climates
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González Jiménez, José María; Marchesi, Claudio; Cartwright, David; Monasterio Guillot, Luis; Gervilla Linares, FernandoEditorial
MDPI
Materia
PGE REE Sc Co Ni-rich serpentinite Mn-oxyhydroxides Laterite
Date
2023-06Referencia bibliográfica
González-Jiménez, J.M.; Villanova-de-Benavent, C.; Yesares, L.; Marchesi, C.; Cartwright, D.; Proenza, J.A.; Monasterio-Guillot, L.; Gervilla, F. Metal Mobility in Embryonic-to-Proto-Ni-Laterite Profiles from Non-Tropical Climates. Minerals 2023, 13, 844. [https://doi.org/10.3390/min13070844]
Sponsorship
MECRAS Project A-RNM-356-UGR20 “Proyectos de I+D+i en el marco del Programa Operativo FEDER Andalucía 2014-2020” of the Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, EmpresasAbstract
We evaluated the mobility of a wide suite of economic metals (Ni, Co, REE, Sc, PGE)
in Ni-laterites with different maturities, developed in the unconventional humid/hyper-humid
Mediterranean climate. An embryonic Ni-laterite was identified at Los Reales in southern Spain,
where a saprolite profile of ~1.5mthick was formed at the expense of peridotites of the subcontinental
lithospheric mantle. In contrast, a more mature laterite was reported from Camán in south-central
Chile, where the thicker (~7 m) weathering profile contains well-developed lower and upper oxide
horizons. This comparative study reveals that both embryonic and mature laterites can form outside
the typical (sub)-tropical climate conditions expected for lateritic soils, while demonstrating a similar
chemical evolution in terms of major (MgO, Fe2O3, and Al2O3), minor (Ni, Mn, Co, Ti, Cr), and
trace (REE, Y, Sc, PGE, Au) element concentrations. We show that, even in the earliest stages of
laterization, the metal remobilization from primary minerals can already result in uneconomic
concentration values.