Peat bogs in northern Alberta, Canada reveal decades of declining atmospheric Pb contamination

Shotyk, William; Appleby, Peter G.; Bicalho, Beatriz; Davies, Lauren; Froese, Duane; Grant-Weaver, Iain; Krachler, Michael; Magnan, Gabriel; Mullan-Boudreau, Gillian; Noernberg, Tommy; Pelletier, Rick; Shannon, Bob; van Bellen, Simon et Zaccone, Claudio (2016). « Peat bogs in northern Alberta, Canada reveal decades of declining atmospheric Pb contamination ». Geophysical Research Letters, 43(18), pp. 9964-9974.

Fichier(s) associé(s) à ce document :
[img]
Prévisualisation
PDF
Télécharger (890kB)

Résumé

Peat cores were collected from six bogs in northern Alberta to reconstruct changes in the atmospheric deposition of Pb, a valuable tracer of human activities. In each profile, the maximum Pb enrichment is found well below the surface. Radiometric age dating using three independent approaches (14C measurements of plant macrofossils combined with the atmospheric bomb pulse curve, plus 210Pb confirmed using the fallout radionuclides 137Cs and 241Am) showed that Pb contamination has been in decline for decades. Today, the surface layers of these bogs are comparable in composition to the “cleanest” peat samples ever found in the Northern Hemisphere, from a Swiss bog ~ 6000 to 9000 years old. The lack of contemporary Pb contamination in the Alberta bogs is testimony to successful international efforts of the past decades to reduce anthropogenic emissions of this potentially toxic metal to the atmosphere.

Type: Article de revue scientifique
Mots-clés ou Sujets: unleaded peat bogs, environment, atmospheric lead, northern Alberta
Unité d'appartenance: Centres institutionnels > Centre de recherche en géochimie et géodynamique (GEOTOP)
Déposé par: Mr Simon Van Bellen
Date de dépôt: 11 sept. 2020 08:47
Dernière modification: 11 sept. 2020 08:47
Adresse URL : http://archipel.uqam.ca/id/eprint/13513

Statistiques

Voir les statistiques sur cinq ans...