Title of article
Heavy metal distribution and early-diagenesis in salt marsh sediments from the Medway Estuary, Kent, UK
Author/Authors
Kate L. Spencer، نويسنده , , Andrew B. Cundy، نويسنده , , Ian W. Croudace، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
12
From page
43
To page
54
Abstract
Salt marsh cores are increasingly being used to study metal pollution chronologies. Salt marshes in macro-tidal estuaries, however,
tend to retain a time-integrated or smoothed signal rather than a record of discrete pollutant inputs, due to extensive sediment
reworking. More generally, an accurate chronology of metal input to salt marsh sediments can be difficult to assess because of the
potential early-diagenetic mobility of both the radionuclides used for dating and the contaminants of interest. A dated salt marsh
core from the macro-tidal Medway Estuary, southeast England, was assessed using both total sediment metal data and partitioning
data. These data indicate that both Mn and Fe have been significantly remobilised and that these diagenetic processes have slightly
modified the vertical distributions of Cu, Pb and Zn. Zinc is the most diagenetically reactive followed by Cu and then Pb. However,
general trends in pollutant loading can still be identified with maximum inputs occurring between ca. 1900 and 1950, decreasing
towards the present day.
Keywords
Lead-210 , Sediment pollution , Caesium-137 , diagenetic mobility , Medway Estuary , Partitioning , Heavy metals
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Record number
954190
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