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HERO ID
3696681
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Nickel Isotope Variations in Terrestrial Silicate Rocks and Geological Reference Materials Measured by MC-ICP-MS
Author(s)
Gueguen, B; Rouxel, O; Ponzevera, E; Bekker, A; Fouquet, Y
Year
2013
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Geostandards and Geoanalytical Research
ISSN:
1639-4488
EISSN:
1751-908X
Volume
37
Issue
3
Page Numbers
297-317
DOI
10.1111/j.1751-908X.2013.00209.x
Web of Science Id
WOS:000324056000005
Abstract
Although initial studies have demonstrated the applicability of Ni isotopes for cosmochemistry and as a potential biosignature, the Ni isotope composition of terrestrial igneous and sedimentary rocks, and ore deposits remains poorly known. Our contribution is fourfold: (a) to detail an analytical procedure for Ni isotope determination, (b) to determine the Ni isotope composition of various geological reference materials, (c) to assess the isotope composition of the Bulk Silicate Earth relative to the Ni isotope reference material NIST SRM 986 and (d) to report the range of mass-dependent Ni isotope fractionations in magmatic rocks and ore deposits. After purification through a two-stage chromatography procedure, Ni isotope ratios were measured by MC-ICP-MS and were corrected for instrumental mass bias using a double-spike correction method. Measurement precision (two standard error of the mean) was between 0.02 and 0.04 parts per thousand, and intermediate measurement precision for NIST SRM 986 was 0.05 parts per thousand (2s). Igneous- and mantle-derived rocks displayed a restricted range of Ni-60/58 values between -0.13 and +0.16 parts per thousand, suggesting an average BSE composition of +0.05 parts per thousand. Manganese nodules (Nod A1; P1), shale (SDO-1), coal (CLB-1) and a metal-contaminated soil (NIST SRM 2711) showed positive values ranging between +0.14 and +1.06 parts per thousand, whereas komatiite-hosted Ni-rich sulfides varied from -0.10 to -1.03 parts per thousand.
Keywords
nickel; stable isotopes; MC-ICP-MS; geological reference materials; Bulk Silicate Earth; abiotic fractionation
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