Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second edition
- Foreword to the first English edition
- Foreword to the French edition
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The properties of elements
- 2 Mass conservation and elemental fractionation
- 3 Fractionation of stable isotopes
- 4 Geochronology and radiogenic tracers
- 5 Element transport
- 6 Geochemical systems
- 7 The chemistry of natural waters
- 8 Biogeochemistry
- 9 Environments
- 10 Mineral reactions
- 11 The solid Earth
- 12 The Earth in the Solar System
- 13 The element barn
- Appendix A Composition of the major geological units
- Appendix B The mixing equation for ratios
- Appendix C A refresher on thermodynamics
- Appendix D The geological time scale
- Appendix E An overview of analytical methods
- Appendix F Physical and geophysical constants
- Appendix G Some equations relative to residence time
- Appendix H The adiabatic atmosphere
- Further reading
- Index
3 - Fractionation of stable isotopes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second edition
- Foreword to the first English edition
- Foreword to the French edition
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The properties of elements
- 2 Mass conservation and elemental fractionation
- 3 Fractionation of stable isotopes
- 4 Geochronology and radiogenic tracers
- 5 Element transport
- 6 Geochemical systems
- 7 The chemistry of natural waters
- 8 Biogeochemistry
- 9 Environments
- 10 Mineral reactions
- 11 The solid Earth
- 12 The Earth in the Solar System
- 13 The element barn
- Appendix A Composition of the major geological units
- Appendix B The mixing equation for ratios
- Appendix C A refresher on thermodynamics
- Appendix D The geological time scale
- Appendix E An overview of analytical methods
- Appendix F Physical and geophysical constants
- Appendix G Some equations relative to residence time
- Appendix H The adiabatic atmosphere
- Further reading
- Index
Summary
Tracing natural processes using isotopic abundances is probably the most successful aspect of modern geochemistry. The methods relying on isotopic data are analytically intensive since they depend on complex separation procedures and expensive equipment, but overall they are conceptually simple and robust. The natural variability of the abundances of isotopes in nature results from different processes:
Under a variety of thermodynamic and kinetic conditions, isotopes distribute themselves unevenly among co-existing phases (minerals, liquids, gases). These effects are in general very subtle as are the differences between the isotopes that create them, which explains why they escaped detection until the 1950s.
Radioactivity removes the parent isotope from an element and adds the decay product to another: 87Rb becomes 87Sr. We will see in the next chapter that the rate of removal of the parent isotope is identical anywhere and at any time in the universe, so this process only affects the relative abundances of the radiogenic isotopes.
Cosmic rays are particles produced outside the Solar System and their origin is still not quite understood. The energy of some of these particles, mostly protons and α particles, occasionally exceeds the nuclear binding energy. In the upper atmosphere, some nuclei, such as nitrogen and oxygen, get chipped by the collision, a process known as “spallation.” Most particles reaching the ground are actually secondary and can be accounted for by spallation.
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- GeochemistryAn Introduction, pp. 45 - 70Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009