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Sedimentary vanadium depletion under sulfidic conditions : Implications for (paleo)redox proxy applications

van Helmond, Niels A.G.M. LU ; Żygadłowska, Olga M. ; Lenstra, Wytze K. ; Klomp, Robin ; Humborg, Christoph ; Conley, Daniel J. LU orcid ; Jetten, Mike S.M. and Slomp, Caroline P. (2025) In Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 393. p.238-253
Abstract

Sedimentary concentrations of redox-sensitive trace metals are widely used to reconstruct past ocean redox conditions. Vanadium (V) has great potential as a (paleo)redox proxy, due to its strong redox-dependent speciation (+III, +IV, +V) and the increased sedimentary sequestration of its more reduced species. The geochemistry of V in sulfide-rich marine environments is not yet well understood, however, hampering the use of V as a (paleo)redox proxy. Here, we present V data for two coastal systems, with bottom water redox conditions ranging from oxic to euxinic, to further constrain V geochemistry. Our sedimentary record from a eutrophic coastal marine basin (Scharendijke basin, Lake Grevelingen, the Netherlands), covering the last... (More)

Sedimentary concentrations of redox-sensitive trace metals are widely used to reconstruct past ocean redox conditions. Vanadium (V) has great potential as a (paleo)redox proxy, due to its strong redox-dependent speciation (+III, +IV, +V) and the increased sedimentary sequestration of its more reduced species. The geochemistry of V in sulfide-rich marine environments is not yet well understood, however, hampering the use of V as a (paleo)redox proxy. Here, we present V data for two coastal systems, with bottom water redox conditions ranging from oxic to euxinic, to further constrain V geochemistry. Our sedimentary record from a eutrophic coastal marine basin (Scharendijke basin, Lake Grevelingen, the Netherlands), covering the last decade, shows distinct enrichments in molybdenum (Mo) and organic carbon (Corg) but depletions in V during seasonal bottom water euxinia, which can be discerned due to the exceptionally high sedimentation rate at our study site (up to 20 cm yr−1). A seasonal study for the same coastal basin confirms this trend and reveals the accumulation of V, iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) in the water column during summer euxinia. We conclude that the slow kinetics of V reduction to V(III) and subsequent precipitation as (oxy)hydroxide V(OH)3(s) likely provide the opportunity for V to escape sedimentary sequestration during summer euxinia, resulting in the observed sedimentary V depletion. Sediments from three sites with contrasting bottom water redox conditions (oxic, seasonally hypoxic, euxinic) in the eutrophic Stockholm Archipelago, show a similar trend as that of Lake Grevelingen, with decreasing V concentrations and increasing Mo and Corg concentrations as bottom water conditions become more reducing. This confirms that our findings for Lake Grevelingen are not site-specific and are likely a generic feature of euxinic coastal systems with high sulfide concentrations (> 0.5 mmol L−1) near the sediment surface and high rates of anaerobic degradation of organic matter. Our results show that co-occurring sedimentary Mo and Corg enrichments and V depletion (or absence or suppression of an enrichment) are indicators of strongly sulfidic conditions in such settings. Finally, we show that maxima in sedimentary molar V/Mn ratios correlate with strongly reducing conditions. This finding contrasts with prior work on V/Mn ratios as a (paleo)redox proxy, implying that further research is necessary.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
(paleo)redox proxy, Deoxygenation, Molar V/Mn ratio, Sediments, Sulfide, Trace metals, Vanadium
in
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
volume
393
pages
16 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:105001073712
ISSN
0016-7037
DOI
10.1016/j.gca.2025.01.022
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
691ba715-ac00-4021-a28e-01be4645e6aa
date added to LUP
2025-08-26 13:20:35
date last changed
2025-10-14 11:44:04
@article{691ba715-ac00-4021-a28e-01be4645e6aa,
  abstract     = {{<p>Sedimentary concentrations of redox-sensitive trace metals are widely used to reconstruct past ocean redox conditions. Vanadium (V) has great potential as a (paleo)redox proxy, due to its strong redox-dependent speciation (+III, +IV, +V) and the increased sedimentary sequestration of its more reduced species. The geochemistry of V in sulfide-rich marine environments is not yet well understood, however, hampering the use of V as a (paleo)redox proxy. Here, we present V data for two coastal systems, with bottom water redox conditions ranging from oxic to euxinic, to further constrain V geochemistry. Our sedimentary record from a eutrophic coastal marine basin (Scharendijke basin, Lake Grevelingen, the Netherlands), covering the last decade, shows distinct enrichments in molybdenum (Mo) and organic carbon (C<sub>org</sub>) but depletions in V during seasonal bottom water euxinia, which can be discerned due to the exceptionally high sedimentation rate at our study site (up to 20 cm yr<sup>−1</sup>). A seasonal study for the same coastal basin confirms this trend and reveals the accumulation of V, iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) in the water column during summer euxinia. We conclude that the slow kinetics of V reduction to V(III) and subsequent precipitation as (oxy)hydroxide V(OH)<sub>3(s)</sub> likely provide the opportunity for V to escape sedimentary sequestration during summer euxinia, resulting in the observed sedimentary V depletion. Sediments from three sites with contrasting bottom water redox conditions (oxic, seasonally hypoxic, euxinic) in the eutrophic Stockholm Archipelago, show a similar trend as that of Lake Grevelingen, with decreasing V concentrations and increasing Mo and C<sub>org</sub> concentrations as bottom water conditions become more reducing. This confirms that our findings for Lake Grevelingen are not site-specific and are likely a generic feature of euxinic coastal systems with high sulfide concentrations (&gt; 0.5 mmol L<sup>−1</sup>) near the sediment surface and high rates of anaerobic degradation of organic matter. Our results show that co-occurring sedimentary Mo and C<sub>org</sub> enrichments and V depletion (or absence or suppression of an enrichment) are indicators of strongly sulfidic conditions in such settings. Finally, we show that maxima in sedimentary molar V/Mn ratios correlate with strongly reducing conditions. This finding contrasts with prior work on V/Mn ratios as a (paleo)redox proxy, implying that further research is necessary.</p>}},
  author       = {{van Helmond, Niels A.G.M. and Żygadłowska, Olga M. and Lenstra, Wytze K. and Klomp, Robin and Humborg, Christoph and Conley, Daniel J. and Jetten, Mike S.M. and Slomp, Caroline P.}},
  issn         = {{0016-7037}},
  keywords     = {{(paleo)redox proxy; Deoxygenation; Molar V/Mn ratio; Sediments; Sulfide; Trace metals; Vanadium}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{238--253}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta}},
  title        = {{Sedimentary vanadium depletion under sulfidic conditions : Implications for (paleo)redox proxy applications}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2025.01.022}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.gca.2025.01.022}},
  volume       = {{393}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}