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Human-induced changes in sediment properties and amplified endmember differences: Possible geological time markers in the future.

Authors :
Yang, Yang
Jia, Jianjun
Zhou, Liang
Gao, Wenhua
Shi, Benwei
Li, Zhanhai
Wang, Ya Ping
Gao, Shu
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Apr2019, Vol. 661, p63-74. 12p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract Many rivers are facing human-induced system regime shifts that have great environmental, ecological and social implications, necessitating an increasing need to quantify the human influence on sediment properties and their impacts on the source-to-sink system of marginal seas. The Huanghe and Changjiang Rivers have experienced a dramatic reduction in sediment flux in recent decades, typifying the human influence on sediment properties of global large rivers. Sediment samples from the two rivers were analyzed to obtain grain size, magnetic and geochemical data. The results show a large difference in sediment properties between pre- and post-dam periods. We applied a discrepancy factor to re-examine the magnetic and geochemical tracers that were previously used in the two rivers. The discrepancy factors of most magnetic and geochemical tracers in the mud-sized sediments of the two rivers increased by an average of about 109% after dam construction. This suggests that human-induced changes in sediment properties have greatly improved the discriminatory ability between the sediments from the two rivers. The results also raise the uncertainty of using previous tracers to distinguish between sediments from the two rivers after damming. Furthermore, significant changes in sediment properties that happened in a relatively short time may provide future geological time markers for sedimentary records with a temporal resolution of 100–101 years. For marine environments, an approach for identifying sediment sources based on multiple independent optimum tracers is also proposed, with composite magnetic (SIRM vs. HIRM) and geochemical (Na 2 O vs. Zn) tracers being considered. The results of this work can advance our knowledge of how human activities alter river systems, and identify a sustainable development model under system regime shifts for areas of high-intensity human activity. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • Large differences in sediment properties exist between pre- and post-dam periods. • An approach of using multiple independent optimum tracers is proposed. • Human activities increased the differences between the sediments from the two rivers. • Amplified endmember differences may provide a future geological time marker. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
661
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134617177
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.01.115