Title of article :
Pb isotope ratios of lake sediments in West Greenland: inferences on pollution sources
Author/Authors :
Richard Bindler، نويسنده , , Ingemar Renberg، نويسنده , , N. John Anderson، نويسنده , , Peter G. Appleby، نويسنده , , Ove Emteryd، نويسنده , , John Boyle، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
Lead (Pb), like many other pollutants, is carried into the Arctic by long-range atmospheric transport from industrial centers at lower latitudes. Unlike other pollutants, Pb can be used to assess emission source regions through the use of stable Pb isotope analyses. Using sediment cores from 17 lakes (three profiles and 14 top/bottom sample pairs) in the Søndre Strømfjord (Kangerlussuaq) region, West Greenland (67°N), this study assesses the extent and origin of Pb pollution along a 150 km transect between the Inland Ice and Davis Strait. Like ice core analyses from the interior of Greenland, the isotope analyses suggest pre-industrial contamination, although significant concentration changes in the lake sediments do not occur until the 18th/19th centuries, with the maximum concentrations occurring about 1970. Compared to the background, the Pb concentrations in recent sediments have increased about 2.5-fold, with slightly higher enrichments towards the coast, where annual precipitation is highest. For all of the lakes, there is a major decline in the 206Pb/207Pb ratio in the recent sediments (mean 1.218±0.030) as compared to deeper sediments (mean 1.365±0.084). Using a Pb isotope mixing model, we calculated an excess Pb isotope ratio, i.e. the isotope ratio necessary to produce the observed declines in recent sediments. While studies of atmospheric aerosols in the high Arctic (206Pb/207Pb ratio 1.16) have indicated that Russian emissions (206Pb/207Pb ratio 1.15–1.16) are a dominant source of arctic pollution, the excess Pb ratios of the lake sediments in the Søndre Strømfjord region (206Pb/207Pb ratio 1.14–1.15), in the low Arctic, suggest that W Europe (206Pb/207Pb ratio 1.14) is also a major emission source for this region.
Keywords :
atmospheric deposition , Arctic , LEAD ISOTOPES , Lake sediments , Pollution source assessment , Lead pollution history
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment