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The junction of Fensch and Moselle rivers,France; mineralogy and composition of river materials
Authors:Emmanuelle Montarges-Pelletier  Laurent Jeanneau  Pierre Faure  Isabelle Bihannic  Odile Barres  Bruno S Lartiges
Institution:(1) Environment and Mineralurgy Laboratory, Nancy University, CNRS-INPL-ENSG, 15, Avenue de Charmois, BP 40, 54501 Vandoeuvre les Nancy Cedex, France;(2) G2R, Nancy University, CNRS - Université Henry Poincaré - Nancy I, BP 239, 54506 Vandoeuvre les Nancy Cedex, France
Abstract:The Moselle river flows in the north-east of France, from Vosges Mountains to neighboring countries Luxembourg and Germany. One of its tributaries, the Fensch river, drains a highly industrialized watershed, strongly impacted by mining, smelting and surfacing activities. The objective of this work, part of a general research program on Moselle watershed (Zone Atelier Moselle) was to assess the impact of the polluted Fensch river on the global quality of the Moselle river. For that purpose, water, sediments and suspended particulate matter were sampled in both rivers, upstream and downstream the junction. Four main sampling campaigns were carried out, in winter during a flood event and in spring at low water level. On a first step, mineralogical analyses (XRD and FTIR) and chemical analyses (ICP-MS, ICP-AES), were performed on sediments, suspended particulate matters and filtered waters. Major and trace elements concentrations were obtained on two different granulometric fractions (0–2 mm and 0–50 μm) revealing the enrichment in heavy metals of fine particles. From one collecting campaign to another, seasonal variations could be evidenced on suspended matter composition even though major minerals (calcite, quartz and kaolinite) were always present. Furthermore, spatial variations were evidenced for Fensch and Moselle downstream sediments. Thus, very fine-grained sediments, poorly crystallized, displaying at the same time higher metal concentrations and higher organic matter content than in Fensch river material, were collected downstream, in a low hydrodynamic conditions zone, assumed as a preferential sedimentary zone or even as a placer. Strong correlations could be revealed between iron content and contaminant concentrations, confirming the origin of polluted material.
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