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Arctic catchment as a sensitive indicator of the environmental changes: distribution and migration of metals (Svalbard)
Authors:K?Kozak  Email author" target="_blank">??PolkowskaEmail author  ??Stachnik  B?Luks  S?Chmiel  M?Ruman  D?Lech  K?Kozio?  S?Tsakovski  V?Simeonov
Institution:1.Department of Analytical Chemistry, The Chemical Faculty,Gdansk University of Technology,Gdańsk,Poland;2.Department of Geomorphology,Jagiellonian University,Kraków,Poland;3.Institute of Geophysics,Polish Academy of Sciences,Warsaw,Poland;4.Faculty of Earth Sciences and Land Management,Maria Sklodowska -Curie University,Lublin,Poland;5.Faculty of Earth Sciences,University of Silesia,Sosnowiec,Poland;6.Centre for Polar Studies KNOW (Leading National Research Centre),Sosnowiec,Poland;7.Polish Geological Institute – The National Research Institute,Warsaw,Poland;8.Department of Geography,University of Sheffield,Sheffield,UK;9.Laboratory of Chemometrics and Environmetrics, Chair of Analytical Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry,University of Sofia “St. Kl. Okhridski”,Sofia,Bulgaria
Abstract:Arctic regions experience metal pollution, despite their remote location, and the distribution and migration of those metals determine their potential impact on the local environment. Here, a High-Arctic catchment (Revelva, Svalbard) located remotely from human-induced pollution sources is studied with respect to the distribution and migration of chosen trace elements (Ag, Al, As, B, Ba, Bi, Ca, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Cs, Mo, Ni, Pb, Sb, Se, Sr, Tl, U, V and Zn) in surface waters. The metal concentrations fluctuated in 2010–2012 between 0.01 and 354 μg L?1, the highest mean-weighted concentration noted for Sr (42.5 μg L?1). The concentrations in the river water were likely influenced by both natural and human-activity-related processes. These factors can produce substances of the same chemical composition (e.g. carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide and metals may be emitted both by a volcanic eruption and by industrial sources). Therefore, chemometric techniques were used in the current paper to distinguish the multiple sources of pollution in the Revelva catchment. The authors were seeking to determine whether there is indeed evidence for contamination, sufficient to cause environmental damage in polar region. As a result, it was shown that the long-range transport could play an important role in shaping the metal concentration profile of this Arctic tundra environment, capturing both the influence of volcanic eruptions within the region and the human activity in a range of distances from the study site.
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