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Historical flux of mercury associated with mining and industrial sources in the Marano and Grado Lagoon (northern Adriatic Sea)

COVELLI, STEFANO
•
Langone L.
•
Acquavita A.
altro
EMILI, ANDREA
2012
  • journal article

Periodico
ESTUARINE, COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Abstract
The “MIRACLE” Project was established in order to assess the feasibility of clam farming and high levels of sediment mercury (Hg) contamination coexisting in the Marano and Grado Lagoon, Italy. This lagoon has been subjected to Hg input from both industrial waste (chlor-alkali plant) and long-term mining activity (Idrija mine, NW Slovenia). One of the subtasks of the “MIRACLE” Project was to determine the historical evolution of Hg accumulation in the lagoon’s bottom sediments. Thirteen 1-m deep sediment cores were collected from the subtidal and intertidal zones, plus one in a saltmarsh, all of which were then analyzed for total Hg content and several physicochemical parameters. Sedimentation rate assessments were performed by measuring short-lived radionuclides (excess 210Pb and 137Cs). For most of the analyzed cores, natural background levels of Hg were observed at depths of 50 e 100 cm. In the eastern area, Hg contamination was found to be at its maximum level at the core top (up to 12 mg g-1) as a consequence of the long-term mining activity. The vertical distribution of Hg was related to the influence of the single-point contamination sources, whereas the grain-size variability or organic matter content seemed not to affect it. In the western area, Hg content at the surface was found not to exceed 7 mg g1 and contamination was recorded only in the first 20e30 cm. Geochronological measurements showed that the depositional flux of Hg was influenced by anthropogenic inputs after 1800, when mining activity was more intense. After 1950, Hg in the surface sediment, most remarkable in the central-western sector, seemed to also be affected by the discharge of the Aussa River, which delivers Hg from the chlor-alkali plant. In 1996, Hg mining at Idrija ceased, however the core profiles did not show any subsequent decreasing trend in terms of Hg flux, which implies the system retaining some “memory” of contamination. Thus, in the short term, a decrease in Hg inputs into the nearby Gulf of Trieste and the lagoon seems unlikely. A preliminary rounded-down gross estimate of total Hg “trapped” in the lagoon’s sediments amounted to 251 t. Such a quantity, along with the complexity of the lagoon ecosystem, suggests that an in toto reclamation of the sediments at the lagoon scale is unfeasible, both economically and environmentally.
DOI
10.1016/j.ecss.2011.12.038
WOS
WOS:000311066800002
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/11368/2500740
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84867909761
Diritti
metadata only access
Soggetti
  • sediment

  • lagoon

  • mercury

  • contamination

  • geochronology

  • Adriatic Sea

Web of Science© citazioni
54
Data di acquisizione
Mar 10, 2024
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