Academic Year 2017/2018

  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Ravenna
  • Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Environmental Sciences (cod. 8011)

Learning outcomes

At the end of the course the student knows the factors that control the abundance and distribution of chemical elements in various environmental matrices (rocks, sediment, soil, water). The students know how to built and interpret phase diagrams, either referring to high temperature and to low temperature settings. The student knows which are the factor governing the fate of chemical elements in the surface environment (pH, redox condition, interaction with reactive surfaces such as clay mineral, natural oxydes and hydroxides, organic matter). The student will have also basic knowledge on water chemistry and isotope geochemistry.

Course contents

Definition and fields of geochemistry. Reminder basic chemical properties of the elements. Origin of the elements and nucleosynthesis. Abundances of the elements in the solar system. Meteorites. Chemical composition of the Earth, its spheres and of the main rock types. Some common minerals: crystal structure and chemical composition. Goldschmidt rules for substitution between elements. Geochemical classification of the elements. Thermodynamic control on the distribution of the elements: partition coefficient. Structure of silicate melts. Crystallization of silicate melts, two and three phases systems. Phase diagrams: building and interpretation. Weathering: water-rock interaction; stability diagram of silicate phases. Water chemistry. Properties and types of clay minerals and colloids. Effects of changing redox conditions on element mobility. Eh-pH diagrams. diagenetic reaction and oxydation of organic matter. Environmental geochemistry: natural levels and alteration. Types of samples for geochemical studies (sediment, soil, water, vegetation). Isotope geochemistry: principles and application of stable isotope geochemistry (H, O, C, N, S).

Readings/Bibliography

  • Faure G. , Principles and applications of inorganic geochemistry. MacMillan Publishing Co
  • Ottonello G., Principi di geochimica. Zanichelli Editore.
  • Henderson P., Inorganic geochemistry. Pergamon Press.
  • Dongarrà G. & Varrica D., Geochimica e ambiente. Edises Palermo
  • Lima A., De Vivo B. & Siegel F. Geochimica ambieltale. Liguori Editore, Napoli

Teaching methods

Frontal lectures, exercises, work on case studies.

Assessment methods

Oral exams. There will also be an intermediate written examination, half-way through the programme. Should the student consider the result of this written examination acceptable, the final oral examination will involve only the remaining part of the programme.

Teaching tools

teaching tools will include personal computer, overhead projector, power point presentation.

Office hours

See the website of Enrico Dinelli