Title of article :
Metal concentrations, fluxes, inventories and chronologies in sediments from Sepetiba and Ribeira Bays: A comparative study
Author/Authors :
de Carvalho Gomes، نويسنده , , Franciane and Godoy، نويسنده , , José Marcus and Godoy، نويسنده , , Maria Luiza D.P. and Lara de Carvalho، نويسنده , , Zenildo and Tadeu Lopes، نويسنده , , Ricardo and Sanchez-Cabeza، نويسنده , , Joan Albert and Drude de Lacerda، نويسنده , , Luiz and Cesar Wasserman، نويسنده , , Julio، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Three sediment cores were sampled at Sepetiba Bay and four cores at Ribeira Bay, Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. Sediment accumulation rates and chronologies were obtained from 210Pb activity-depth profiles. Sediment accumulation rates in Ribera Bay ranged from 1.2 mm y−1 in the inner bay to 2.6 mm y−1 close to its entrance. In Sepetiba Bay two sediment accumulation rates were observed: a lower rate of 0.35 cm y−1 before the 1960s and 0.76 cm y−1 since then. The cause of this change is due to the construction of the Santa Cecília impoundment (1955) that brings water from the Paraíba do Sul Basin into the Guandu River, which increased its flow from the original 20 m3 s−1 to 160 m3 s−1. Concentration of 44 elements was obtained by ICP-MS after total dissolution of samples from two selected cores. The relative differences between the concentrations of crustal elements, such as Al, Fe and Ti are only about 20% (p < 0.05). Cd and Zn are 15 and four times larger in Sepetiba Bay than in Ribeira Bay, respectively. Other major and minor elements show lower statistically significant differences. The enrichment factors and metal inventories show that Sepetiba Bay can be considered polluted with Bi, Cd, Cr, Cu, Sb and Zn. Particularly, Cd and Zn present concentrations three and four times higher than the Brazilian existing limits.
Keywords :
Pb-210 dating , sediments , Sepetiba bay , Ribeira Bay , Heavy metals , Brazil
Journal title :
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Journal title :
Marine Pollution Bulletin