Title of article
Estimates of early-industrial inputs of nutrients to river systems: implication for coastal eutrophication
Author/Authors
Gilles Billena، نويسنده , , b، نويسنده , , U، نويسنده , , Josette Garnier، نويسنده , , Chlo´e Deligneb، نويسنده , , Claire Billenb، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
10
From page
43
To page
52
Abstract
Although coastal eutrophication is generally recognised as a recent phenomenon related to the well-documented
increase in riverine nutrient delivery during the last 30 or 40 years, a few historical records paradoxically show that,
in some places like the Southern Bight of the North Sea, or the Northern Adriatic, algal proliferation as intense as
presently observed was already regularly occurring at the end of the 19th century. Estimated riverine nutrient loads
from diffuse sources or from domestic point sources of waste water at that time are too low to account for these
observations. We attempted a retrospective evaluation of the possible contribution of industrial activity to nutrient
river loading. The figures indicate that, by the end of the last century, large scale use of traditional processes in
textile and paper industries, in tanneries, candles factories and others was responsible for a dominant part of the
nutrient load carried by rivers in Western Europe and could have caused nutrient inputs to coastal zones similar to
the present ones.
Keywords
Eutrophication , nutrients , History , Industrial pollution load
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
982956
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