Heavy metals on planet Earth

Txintxurreta Agirre, Arantxa

Elhuyar Zientziaren Komunikazioa

It is not seen from space, but the Earth has several layers. And in these layers, heavy metals are not always distributed in the same way, but predominate in the nucleus, but in the earth's crust appear very few compared to other chemical elements. However, although they are scarce, they are important and, in addition, they are in proportions suitable for human exploitation.
Heavy metals on planet Earth
01/06/2007 | Txintxurreta Agirre, Arantxa | Elhuyar Zientzia Komunikazioa

(Photo: ESA/SIRA Technology LTD.)
To understand the distribution of heavy metals it is necessary to resort to the creation of the Earth, again to space. Earth arises when matter is condensed in a gaseous state -- chemical elements -- around a primitive sun. In the later development of that planet, meteorites collided constantly and experts believe that the impact of a meteorite caused the planet to melt again, a meteorite the size of Mars! ). This new fusion involved the separation of elements according to their density. The heavier elements sank towards the center of the Earth and the lighter ones were on the surface.

In the center of the Earth, 3.000 km from the surface, is the nucleus. The core is a dense, warm area of 3,485 km radius, made up of heavy metals, mainly iron and nickel, although it also contains traces of other metals such as copper.

On the terrestrial surface, however, there are few heavy metals. The most abundant chemical elements are oxygen and silicon, however much they are, and the most abundant heavy metal is iron, the rest of heavy metals appear in very small proportions on surface. The man long ago appropriated the properties of iron and exploited it. However, it is difficult to find iron in a natural state as a free element and, in most cases, forms compounds with other elements. The most common way to explain heavy metals is the formation of mineral compounds. Thus, among other things, there is copper in the malachite, lead in the galena, vanadium in the patronite and chromium in the chromite. However, minerals form rocks and, to a greater or lesser extent, heavy metals appear in all types of rocks.

In igneous rocks (due to the solidification of the magma) is common the presence of concentrations of metals such as gold, platinum, uranium, copper, chromium and vanadium, selenium and others. Nor is it rare that gold is in metamorphic rocks (originated by high pressures and temperatures), but it is a rock

It also appears in large quantities in sediments (rocks originating after sedimentation). Also in this type of rocks are aluminum, platinum and iron, among others.

This type of rock is found all over the world and, when the concentration of heavy metals is high, they are exploited by humans through the formation of mines.

Euskal Herria

In the Basque Country, the most abundant and most exploited metal is, without a doubt, iron. In the first century BC, the old Pliny realized this and affirmed that "by the sea of Bizkaia there was an iron mountain." And so it was. In the mountains of Triano and Galdames was extracted abundant iron, forming around it a powerful industrial chain that has survived until recently. In Euskal Herria mining had a singular importance on the left bank of the Nervión river.

The most common way to explain heavy metals is by forming mineral compounds.
Urretxu Museum of Fossils and Minerals
But the minerals have not been exploited only in the area of Bizkaia. The metal materials were mainly concentrated in the Paleozoic (from 570 million years to 349 million years ago) and in the lower Cretaceous (from 146,000 to 65,000 years ago) among which stand out magnesium, lead, zinc and iron in Aiako Harria, Alduden and Bortziriak. Special mention deserve the mines of Arditurri near Aiako Harria. They are the oldest rocks of Euskal Herria, in which formerly the silver and lead were also exploited. These minerals are spread all over the world from the port of Irun.

Silver and iron also came out in Irati, and they were often used to supply Orbaitzeta's weapons ironwork. In Aralar came the copper and in the area of Eibar, where there was also lead. There were also more copper, around Atxondo and Axpe. Lead and zinc have been extracted from the Cretaceous rocks in eleven areas of the Basque Country, such as Carranza, Mañaria, Atxondo, Aulesti, Berriatua, Itziar, Aizkorri, Legorreta, Barande, Araiz, etc.

We cannot forget, however, a special heavy metal that has not been exploited by the industry, the one that surrounds us: the iridium. Visible on the coast. This layer is found all over the world, but in few places it appears as on the coast of Biscay, Gipuzkoa and Labortana. Geologists from all over the world usually come to see this fine and whitish line.

The iridium is a heavy metal with the symbol I. Despite being abundant in the cosmos, on Earth the metal is very scarce. In the rocks between the Cretaceous and the Tertiary, however, a thin layer of great concentration of iridium appears. According to a theory, this iridium comes from space, it is brought by a meteorite. According to this idea, 65 million years ago, a large meteorite hit the Earth and the collision caused the release of dust into the atmosphere. Gradually, the suspended particles in the air, which were enriched with the iridium, were deposited on the ground and covered everything. This deck is what we currently see on the coast: Sopelana, Zumaia, Bidart... This theory is used to explain the disappearance of dinosaurs.

The steel industry has had importance in the development of the Basque industry.
From file

Mines of the world

Iron is typical of Euskal Herria, but it is also common throughout the world. It is the most abundant in heavy metals, as indicated above. However, in Euskal Herria it appears forming compounds, while in the west of Greenland the iron is loose. In meteorites, iron is also usually loose, sometimes alloy with nickel. The most common iron minerals are hematites, but others such as goethite, magnetite, siderite and limonite are also exploited. The oldest known mine dates back some 50,000 years, according to carbon 14, and is located in Swaziland, Africa. It is believed that the man of the Paleolithic drew from there hematites to form pigments with iron.

Mining is an important economic pillar for many countries. The image is a mine in Bolivia.
A. A. Jonquières/Unesco Photobank
More items from South Africa are also extracted. Half of the chromite that leaves in the world, for example, comes from the mines of South Africa (from the mineral chromite chromium is obtained). In India, Turkey and Kazakhstan large amounts of chromium are also extracted. In the Congo, on the other hand, the tantalum is exploited, an element that normally only appears in the tracks.

Titanium is more abundant and is the ninth most abundant chemical element on the earth's surface. It is a heavy metal for some. This is the element chosen by Frank Gehry for the Guggenheim in Bilbao. It is found in most igneous rocks, but it is never free. Anatase, brookite, ilmenite, leukoxene, titanite... are the most common minerals. There are important titanium stores in Australia, Scandinavia, the United States and Malaysia.

Abundant mineral is exploited in South America. Mexico, Peru, Chile and Brazil are the countries with the highest production. The richest mine in the world is located in Mexico. In Mexico there are also important mines for the extraction of lead, zinc and gold. For its part, Chile has the largest copper exploitation in the world and Peru is the country that houses the largest gold mine in South America...

Sierra on the river Bed de Leone in search of gold.
Photo Library of the International Labour Office/Deloche P.

Although most elements appear to form chemical compounds, the few heavy elements that appear in freedom have a special value for the human being. Among them are gold, silver and copper (there is also platinum, mercury and lead, but they are scarce).

The man first discovered free metals. They were free, for example, the golden pipes in the streams, which caused the fever of gold. But what is easy to find, also to get lost; finding free elements is therefore rare.

Biocentric approach

Although the proportion of heavy metals on Earth is not high, it is clear that they are of human interest and exploits them. But he does not stay alone in desire. The metallic core of the Earth creates a magnetic field that allows life: the so-called magnetosphere surrounds the Earth and protects it from solar storms. Moreover, the human being and the rest of the living beings are essential for the life of heavy metals, since they intervene in their basic functions.

Rarity in heavy metals
Rare lands are heavy metals. Rare lands are neither land nor rare. The word earth means oxide. in the French of the twentieth century. At that time, when rare lands were discovered, the French lingua franca and the terre used to describe these elements. They observed that in the minerals appeared in a very small proportion and concluded that they were rare in the soil. Later it has been discovered that they are more common than expected. They are not found in potentially exploitable concentrations, that is true, but in rare lands, the lutetium is 200 times more abundant on surface than gold.
Rare earth is called the elements that go from the lanthanum to the lutetium, the itrium and the scanning, as well as the compounds that form them. Some definitions include actinides in rare lands.
The actinides are the 15 chemical elements that range from action to lawrence. Without stable isotopes: all are radioactive. On the terrestrial surface, uranium and thorium are the only ones that appear naturally, in a quantity somewhat larger than the traces. Traces of neptune and plutonium have also been found in uranium mines, due to the disintegration of the latter. The rest of the actinids have been found in nuclear sediments or have been synthesized, that is, created by man. Everyone has a very short life.
Really strange heavy metals
Tecno and promised. They are very unstable and very rare elements. Although they have been found in the atmosphere of stars, on Earth they are only produced by fission of heavy radioactive elements (such as uranium and thorium fission). Technotion was the first element created by man. Shortly after the synthesis, in 1952, P.W. Astronomer Merril first discovered it in the star R Andromeda.
Renio and osmio. Most of the rhenium and osmium on the planet is found in the nucleus, forming a nucleus with iron and nickel. When the Earth was formed, they dissolved in the molten irons. They are very rare on the terrestrial surface and it is calculated that these two elements form a single part of the billion. Osmium is the densest of the chemical elements (together with iridium).
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