Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways Approach

Acid rock drainage (ARD) and disposal of tailings that result from mining activities impact coastal areas in many countries. The dispersion of metals from mine sites that are both proximal and distal to the shoreline can be examined using a pathways approach in which physical and chemical processes...

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Main Author: Randolph A. Koski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Oceanography Society 2012-06-01
Series:Oceanography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/25-2_koski.pdf
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spelling doaj-661499a734d446e6b7a7505fc5a155132020-11-25T01:45:03ZengThe Oceanography SocietyOceanography1042-82752012-06-01252170183Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways ApproachRandolph A. KoskiAcid rock drainage (ARD) and disposal of tailings that result from mining activities impact coastal areas in many countries. The dispersion of metals from mine sites that are both proximal and distal to the shoreline can be examined using a pathways approach in which physical and chemical processes guide metal transport in the continuum from sources (sulfide minerals) to bioreceptors (marine biota). Large amounts of metals can be physically transported to the coastal environment by intentional or accidental release of sulfide-bearing mine tailings. Oxidation of sulfide minerals results in elevated dissolved metal concentrations in surface waters on land (producing ARD) and in pore waters of submarine tailings. Changes in pH, adsorption by insoluble secondary minerals (e.g., Fe oxyhydroxides), and precipitation of soluble salts (e.g., sulfates) affect dissolved metal fluxes. Evidence for bioaccumulation includes anomalous metal concentrations in bivalves and reef corals, and overlapping Pb isotope ratios for sulfides, shellfish, and seaweed in contaminated environments. Although bioavailability and potential toxicity are, to a large extent, functions of metal speciation, specific uptake pathways, such as adsorption from solution and ingestion of particles, also play important roles. Recent emphasis on broader ecological impacts has led to complementary methodologies involving laboratory toxicity tests and field studies of species richness and diversity.http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/25-2_koski.pdfacid rock drainagecoastal miningmetal dispersion in the ocean
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Randolph A. Koski
spellingShingle Randolph A. Koski
Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways Approach
Oceanography
acid rock drainage
coastal mining
metal dispersion in the ocean
author_facet Randolph A. Koski
author_sort Randolph A. Koski
title Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways Approach
title_short Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways Approach
title_full Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways Approach
title_fullStr Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways Approach
title_full_unstemmed Metal Dispersion Resulting from Mining Activities in Coastal Environments: A Pathways Approach
title_sort metal dispersion resulting from mining activities in coastal environments: a pathways approach
publisher The Oceanography Society
series Oceanography
issn 1042-8275
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Acid rock drainage (ARD) and disposal of tailings that result from mining activities impact coastal areas in many countries. The dispersion of metals from mine sites that are both proximal and distal to the shoreline can be examined using a pathways approach in which physical and chemical processes guide metal transport in the continuum from sources (sulfide minerals) to bioreceptors (marine biota). Large amounts of metals can be physically transported to the coastal environment by intentional or accidental release of sulfide-bearing mine tailings. Oxidation of sulfide minerals results in elevated dissolved metal concentrations in surface waters on land (producing ARD) and in pore waters of submarine tailings. Changes in pH, adsorption by insoluble secondary minerals (e.g., Fe oxyhydroxides), and precipitation of soluble salts (e.g., sulfates) affect dissolved metal fluxes. Evidence for bioaccumulation includes anomalous metal concentrations in bivalves and reef corals, and overlapping Pb isotope ratios for sulfides, shellfish, and seaweed in contaminated environments. Although bioavailability and potential toxicity are, to a large extent, functions of metal speciation, specific uptake pathways, such as adsorption from solution and ingestion of particles, also play important roles. Recent emphasis on broader ecological impacts has led to complementary methodologies involving laboratory toxicity tests and field studies of species richness and diversity.
topic acid rock drainage
coastal mining
metal dispersion in the ocean
url http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/25-2_koski.pdf
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