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Sediment heavy metal record in Lake Baikal: natural and antrhopogenic sources
Authors:JF Boyle  AW Mackay  NL Rose  RJ Flower  PG Appleby
Institution:(1) Department of Geography, University of Liverpool, PO Box 147, Liverpool, L69 3BX, UK;(2) Environmental Change Research Centre, University College London, 26 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AP, UK;(3) Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Liverpool, PO Box 147, Liverpool, L69 3BX, UK
Abstract:Geochemical analysis of six radiometrically dated short cores of recent sediment from Lake Baikal shows clear evidence of enhanced Pb supply. However, the sediment concentration increases are very small; the average Pb concentration rises from a baseline value of 10.9 mgrg g-1 to a peak value of only 14.8 mgrg g-1. In contrast to the more polluted lakes commonly studied in Europe and North America, variation in Pb concentration is far more strongly influenced by natural variation than by pollution. In sediment deposited over the last 150–200 years 73% of the variance in the sediment Pb concentration can be accounted for by variation in bulk composition of the sediment, and by atmospheric pollution. Factors influencing Pb concentrations over this time period are, in order of decreasing average importance (fraction of total variance explained), catchment supply (indicated by 226Ra activity variation) (43%), anthropogenic Pb emissions (24%), and dilution by ferromanganese hydroxides (6%). On longer (1000s of years) time scales dilution by biogenic silica is probably more important.The recent enhanced supply of catchment Pb correlates with accelerating accumulation rates, indicating a link with enhanced erosion. Anthropogenic sources dominate only in the southern basin, where local fossil-fuel burning industry is situated. The evidence for a local industrial source for the Pb pollution is strengthened by the high correlation between the inventories for Pb and for spheroidal carbonaceous particles. The absence of detectable anthropogenic Pb enrichment in the northern part of the lake suggests that long-distance Pb pollution is small compared with the local natural supply.
Keywords:geochemistry  heavy metals  lake sediments  palaeolimnology  Lake Baikal  Russia
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