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Comment by pfdietz

2 days ago

It's sulfides like pyrite that, when exposed to air, are oxidized by bacteria to sulfate.

There's an enormous belt of pyrite in Spain that has caused a river, the Rio Tinto, to be one of the most acid rivers on the planet.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Tinto_(river)

I'm not sure the belt of pyrite is best labelled as the cause here.

It might have something to do with the inferred activities of Rio Tinto, a transnational corporation that is one of the largest mining firms in the world.

  • The river was polluted millennia before the Rio Tinto company came into existence. There's been mining operations along the Rio Tinto since ca. 3000 BC.

    • Yes. Sure.

      But before the mining operations? Probably not very polluted. It's the mining doing the polluting, not the belt of pyrite simply existing.

      1 reply →

Yes, and it's not just "random" sulfur, it's integral to the geologic complexes that miners look for to get the minerals they want.

Think of it like the husk of a corn cob, or the cob of your corn. It's a byproduct of the very things we're looking for in mining.

The only other activity that could get hose minerals is indistinguishable from magic.