Publications by authors named "Joyce M McBeth"

Historical mining and mineral processing at the former Giant Mine (Yellowknife, NT, Canada) created an enduring legacy of arsenic (As) and antimony (Sb) contamination. Approximately 237,000 tonnes of arsenic trioxide roaster waste (ATRW) generated between 1948 and 1999 remains stored on-site in underground chambers. We studied the chemical forms and phase associations of As and Sb to improve understanding of ATRW environmental behavior.

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High-energy-resolution fluorescence-detected (HERFD) X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy (XANES) is a spectroscopic method that allows for increased spectral feature resolution, and greater selectivity to decrease complex matrix effects compared with conventional XANES. XANES is an ideal tool for speciation of elements in solid-phase environmental samples. Accurate speciation of As in mine waste materials is important for understanding the mobility and toxicity of As in near-surface environments.

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Microbially mediated sulfate reduction is a promising cost-effective and sustainable process utilized in permeable reactive barriers (PRB) and constructed wetlands to treat mine wastewater. Laboratory batch experiments were performed to evaluate nickel (Ni) isotope fractionation associated with precipitation of Ni-sulfides in the presence of the sulfate-reducing bacterium (SRB) (DSM-642). Precipitates were collected anaerobically and characterized by synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), scanning electron microscopy combined with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM).

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This study investigated relationships between microbial communities, groundwater chemistry, and geochemical and mineralogical characteristics in field-aged biofilter media from a two-stage, pilot-scale, flow-through biofiltration unit designed to remove Fe(II) and Mn(II) from cold groundwater (8 to 15 °C). High-throughput 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing of influent groundwater and biofilter samples (solids, effluents, and backwash water) revealed significant differences in the groundwater, Fe filter, and Mn filter communities. These community differences reflect conditions in each filter that select for populations that biologically oxidize Fe(II) and Mn(II) in the two filters, respectively.

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Anthropogenically-impacted environments offer the opportunity to discover novel microbial species and metabolisms, which may be undetectable in natural systems. Here, a combined metagenomic and geochemical study in Base Mine Lake, Alberta, Canada, which is the only oil sands end pit lake to date, revealed that nitrification was performed by members from Nitrosomonadaceae, Chloroflexi and unclassified Gammaproteobacteria "MBAE14." While Nitrosomonadaceae and Chloroflexi groups were relatively abundant in the upper oxygenated zones, MBAE14 dominated the hypoxic hypolimnetic zones (approximately 30% of total microbial communities); MBAE14 was not detected in the underlying anoxic tailings.

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Microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC) is a complex biogeochemical process involving interactions between microbes, metals, minerals, and their environment. We hypothesized that sediment-derived iron-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) would colonize and become numerically abundant on steel surfaces incubated in coastal marine environments. To test this, steel coupons were incubated on sediments over 40 days, and samples were taken at regular intervals to examine microbial community succession.

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Surfaces of carbon steel (CS) exposed to mixed cultures of iron-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) and dissimilatory iron-reducing bacteria (FeRB) in seawater media under aerobic conditions were rougher than surfaces of CS exposed to pure cultures of either type of microorganism. The roughened surface, demonstrated by profilometry, is an indication of loss of metal from the surface. In the presence of CS, aerobically grown FeOB produced tight, twisted helical stalks encrusted with iron oxides.

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Oxygen-dependent, neutrophilic iron-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) are important drivers of iron transformations in marine and freshwater environments. Despite remarkable similarities in physiology and morphotype, known freshwater and marine FeOB are clustered in different classes of Proteobacteria; freshwater FeOB in the Betaproteobacteria and marine FeOB in the Zetaproteobacteria. To determine effects of salinity on these microbes, we examined the mineral biosignatures and molecular ecology of bacteria in FeOB mats collected along an estuarine salinity gradient.

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Evidence for microbial Fe redox cycling was documented in a circumneutral pH groundwater seep near Bloomington, Indiana. Geochemical and microbiological analyses were conducted at two sites, a semi-consolidated microbial mat and a floating puffball structure. In situ voltammetric microelectrode measurements revealed steep opposing gradients of O(2) and Fe(II) at both sites, similar to other groundwater seep and sedimentary environments known to support microbial Fe redox cycling.

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Members of the neutrophilic iron-oxidizing candidate class Zetaproteobacteria have predominantly been found at sites of microbially mediated iron oxidation in marine environments around the Pacific Ocean. Eighty-four full-length (>1,400-bp) and 48 partial-length Zetaproteobacteria small-subunit (SSU) rRNA gene sequences from five novel clone libraries, one novel Zetaproteobacteria isolate, and the GenBank database were analyzed to assess the biodiversity of this burgeoning class of the Proteobacteria and to investigate its biogeography between three major sampling regions in the Pacific Ocean: Loihi Seamount, the Southern Mariana Trough, and the Tonga Arc. Sequences were grouped into operational taxonomic units (OTUs) on the basis of a 97% minimum similarity.

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Microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC) of mild steel in seawater is an expensive and enduring problem. Little attention has been paid to the role of neutrophilic, lithotrophic, iron-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) in MIC. The goal of this study was to determine if marine FeOB related to Mariprofundus are involved in this process.

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In the 1830s, iron bacteria were among the first groups of microbes to be recognized for carrying out a fundamental geological process, namely the oxidation of iron. Due to lingering questions about their metabolism, coupled with difficulties in culturing important community members, studies of Fe-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) have lagged behind those of other important microbial lithotrophic metabolisms. Recently, research on lithotrophic, oxygen-dependent FeOB that grow at circumneutral pH has accelerated.

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Dynamic gamma-camera imaging of radiotracer technetium ((99m)Tc) was used to assess the impact of biostimulation of metal-reducing bacteria on technetium mobility at 10(-12) mol L(-1) concentrations in sediments. Addition of the electron donor acetate was used to stimulate a redox profile in sediment columns, from oxic to Fe(III)-reducing conditions. When (99m)Tc was pumped through the columns, real-time gamma-camera imaging combined with geochemical analyses showed technetium was localized in regions containing biogenic Fe(II).

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Technetium is a redox active radionuclide, which is present as a contaminant at a number of sites where nuclear fuel cycle operations have been carried out. Recent studies suggest that Tc(VII), which is soluble under oxic conditions, will be retained in sediments as Fe(III)-reducing conditions develop, due to reductive scavenging as hydrous TcO2. However, the behavior of technetium during subsequent reoxidation of sediments remains poorly characterized.

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