Back to Search Start Over

Anthropogenic mercury deposition in Flin Flon Manitoba and the Experimental Lakes Area Ontario (Canada): A multi-lake sediment core reconstruction.

Authors :
Wiklund, Johan A.
Kirk, Jane L.
Muir, Derek C.G.
Evans, Marlene
Yang, Fan
Keating, Jonathan
Parsons, Matthew T.
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. May2017, Vol. 586, p685-695. 11p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

High-resolution records of anthropogenic mercury (Hg) deposition were constructed from 9 lakes located 5–75 km from the Flin Flon, Manitoba smelter (formerly one of North America's largest atmospheric Hg point sources) and 5 lakes in Experimental Lakes Area (ELA), Ontario; a region remote from major Hg point sources. Anthropogenic Hg deposition, as both a flux and inventory, was determined after accounting for lake-specific natural Hg background concentrations, changes in sedimentation and sediment focusing. Results show that records of anthropogenic flux and inventory of Hg were remarkably consistent among the ELA lakes, but varied by 2 orders of magnitude among Flin Flon lakes. The relation between Hg inventories (normalized for prevailing wind direction) and distance from the smelter was used to estimate the total Hg fallout within a 50 km radius in 5 year time-steps, thus providing a quantitative spatial-temporal Hg depositional history for the Flin Flon region. The same relation solved for 8 cardinal directions weighted by the inverse of the previously applied wind direction normalization generates a map of Hg inventory and deposition on the landscape (Supplementary video). This novel application of sediment core data constructs a landscape model and allows for a visualization of contaminant deposition with respect to a point major source in both space and time. The propensity for Hg to undergo long-range, even global transport explains why Hg deposition within 50 km of Flin Flon was ~ 11% of estimated releases. That is until smelter releases were reduced > 10-fold (post-2000), after which observed deposition exceeded smelter releases, suggesting landscape re-emission/remobilization of legacy Hg is a major ongoing regional source of Hg. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
586
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
121754182
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.02.046