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Anthropogenic metal contamination and sapropel imprints in deep Mediterranean sediments
Authors:Angelidis M O  Radakovitch O  Veron A  Aloupi M  Heussner S  Price B
Institution:a Department of Environment, University of the Aegean, Lofos Panepistimiou, 81100 Mytilene, Greece;b CEREGE – CNRS UMR6635, Université Aix-Marseille III, Europôle de l’Arbois BP 80, 13545 Aix-en-Provence Cedex 4, France;c CEFREM, University of Perpignan, 52 Alduy Ave., 66860 Perpignan Cedex, France;d Department of Geology and Geophysics, Kings Building, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH16 5NS, UK
Abstract:Sediment cores from the deep Balearic basin and the Cretan Sea provide evidence for the accumulation of Cd, Pd and Zn in the top few centimeters of the abyssal Mediterranean sea-bottom. In both cores, 206Pb/207Pb profiles confirm this anthropogenic impact with less radiogenic imprints toward surface sediments. The similarity between excess 210Pb accumulated in the top core and the 210Pb flux suggests that top core metal inventories reasonably reflect long-term atmospheric deposition to the open Mediterranean. Pb inventory in the western core for the past 100 years represents 20-30% of sediment coastal inventories, suggesting that long-term atmospheric deposition determined from coastal areas has to be used cautiously for mass balance calculations in the open Mediterranean. In the deeper section of both cores, Al normalized trace metal profiles suggest diagenetic remobilization of Fe, Mn, Cu and, to a lesser extent, Pb that likely corresponds to sapropel event S1.
Keywords:Mediterranean  Pollution  Sediments  Metals  Lead isotopes  Sapropels
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