ORGANIC-MATTER
; ATMOSPHERIC MERCURY
; SEDIMENT RECORDS
; ACCUMULATION RATES
; TROPICAL ANDES
; NORTHERN CHILE
; PEAT BOG
; WATER
; PYROLYSIS
; EVOLUTION
WOS学科分类:
Environmental Sciences
WOS研究方向:
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
英文摘要:
Volcanismis one of the major natural processes emitting mercury (Hg) to the atmosphere, representing a significant component of the global Hg budget. The importance of volcanic eruptions for local-scale Hg deposition was investigated using analyses of Hg, inorganic elemental tracers, and organic biomarkers in a sediment sequence from Lake Chungara (4520 m a.s.l.). Environmental change and Hg deposition in the immediate vicinity of the Parinacota volcano were reconstructed over the last 2700 years, encompassing the pre-anthropogenic and anthropogenic periods. Twenty eruptions delivering large amounts of Hg (1 to 457 mu g Hg m(-2) yr(-1) deposited at the timescale of the event) were locally recorded. Peaks of Hg concentration recorded after most of the eruptions were attributed to a decrease in sedimentation rate together with the rapid re-oxidation of gaseous elemental Hg and deposition with fine particles and incorporation into lake primary producers. Over the study period, the contribution of volcanic emissions has been estimated as 32% of the total Hg input to the lake. Sharp depletions in primary production occurred at each eruption, likely resulting from massive volcaniclastic inputs and changes in the lake-water physico-chemistry. Excluding the volcanic deposition periods, Hg accumulation rates rose from natural background values (1.9 +/- 0.5 mu g m(-2) yr(-1)) by a factor of 2.3 during the pre-colonial mining period (1400-900 yr cal. BP), and by a factor of 6 and 7.6, respectively, during the Hispanic colonial epoch (400-150 yr cal. BP) and the industrial era (similar to 140 yr cal. BP to present). Altogether, the dataset indicates that lake primary production has been the main, but not limiting, carrier for Hg to the sediment. Volcanic activity and climate change are only secondary drivers of local Hg deposition relative to the magnitude of regional and global anthropogenic emissions. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
1.Univ Grenoble Alpes, Univ Savoie Mt Blanc, CNRS, IRD,IFSTTAR,ISTerre, F-38000 Grenoble, France 2.Univ Mayor San Andres, Lab Hidroquim, Inst Invest Quim, Campus Univ Cota Cota,Casilla 3161, La Paz, Bolivia 3.Umea Univ, Dept Ecol & Environm Sci, Umea, Sweden 4.Eawag, CH-8600 Dubendorf, Switzerland 5.Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Univ Str 16, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland 6.Inst Catala Paleoecol Humana & Evolucio Social, IPHES, Tarragona, Spain 7.Univ Rovira & Virgili, Area Prehist, Tarragona, Spain 8.Univ Savoie Mt Blanc, CNRS, Environm Dynam & Terr Montagne EDYTEM, F-73373 Le Bourget Du Lac, France 9.CNRS, IPREM UMR 5254, LCABIE, F-64053 Pau, France 10.Univ Pau & Pays Adour, F-64053 Pau, France 11.Univ Nebraska, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Lincoln, NE USA 12.Duke Univ, Div Earth & Ocean Sci, Durham, NC USA
Recommended Citation:
Guedron, S.,Tolu, J.,Brisset, E.,et al. Late Holocene volcanic and anthropogenic mercury deposition in the western Central Andes (Lake Chungara, Chile)[J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT,2019-01-01,662:903-914