Geochemical Atlas – Erzgebirge and Vogtland
Mercury in stream sediments
Produktform: Karte
Mercury (Hg) shows a slightly right skewed log distribution. The highest measured concentration is 1.74 mg/kg; the lowest is inferior to the detection limit of 0.005 mg/kg. The arithmetic average of Hg is 0.06 mg/kg, the median is 0.04 mg/kg.
Hg shows a slight affinity to sedimentary and metasedimentary rocks of Ordovician to Permian age. Areas with important concentrations (Hg 0.16 mg/kg) coincide with known natural Hg occurrences such as a 4 km wide area in the Devonian syncline northeast of the Neumark U deposit, a spot north of Schneeberg in Ordovician metasediments and an approx.
7 sqkm large area east of Hainichen where Proterozoic gneisses and Carboniferous sedimentary rocks occur.
Similar concentrations are reached in the Freiberg mining district, possibly augmented during historic processing from the use of Hg for extraction and amalgamation. Elevated Hg also coincides with
the Schneckenstein U deposit and with a circular area in Ordovician metapelites and siliceous shales further southwest, at the Czech border east of Adorf, where Mo, Cd, As, Sb and Se are also elevated. Furthermore, an area of 7 km E-Wextension with Hg 0.1 mg/kg is located in Ordovician micaschists and phyllites south of Stollberg. Concentrations of Hg 0.04 mg/kg characterise the entire northern Erzgebirge rim. Low concentrations of mercury Hg weiterlesen
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