Abstract: | Rhodium, one of the least abundant of the Pt-group elements in the earth's crust, has the second highest concentration in seawater. This may be a consequence of strong complexing, perhaps kinetically restrained with time constants of the order of centuries to millenia. The element shows a nutrient-like distribution in waters of the Pacific Ocean. Pelagic and coastal sediments have Rh concentrations close to crustal values. There is a remarkable enrichment of Rh in ferromanganese minerals that cannot be explained by oxidative capture. Unlike the other Pt-group elements, Rh is enriched in the high temperature hydrothermal sulfide deposits as well as phosphorites. |