Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great Lakes

Geochemical analyses applied to lake sedimentary records can reveal the history of pollution by metals and the effects of remedial efforts. Lakes provide ideal environments for geochemical studies because they have steady deposition of fine grained material suitable for fixation of pollutants. The L...

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Main Authors: Meagan N. Aliff, Euan D. Reavie, Sara P. Post, Lawrence M. Zanko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-05-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9034.pdf
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spelling doaj-c894c3f83498488c9b966da6682e675b2020-11-25T02:05:55ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-05-018e903410.7717/peerj.9034Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great LakesMeagan N. AliffEuan D. ReavieSara P. PostLawrence M. ZankoGeochemical analyses applied to lake sedimentary records can reveal the history of pollution by metals and the effects of remedial efforts. Lakes provide ideal environments for geochemical studies because they have steady deposition of fine grained material suitable for fixation of pollutants. The Laurentian Great Lakes are the most studied system in this field, and they have well-preserved chronological profiles. To date, this important system has been considered in parts for inorganic geochemistry, hampering basin-wide conclusions regarding metal contamination. We filled spatial and temporal gaps in a comprehensive geochemical analysis of 11 sediment cores collected from all five Great Lakes. Hierarchical cluster analysis of all Great Lakes samples divided the metal analytes into five functional groups: (1) carbonate elements; (2) metals and oxides with diverse natural sources, including a subgroup of analytes known to be anthropogenically enriched (Cd, Pb, Sn, Zn, and Sb); (3) common crustal elements; (4) metals related to coal and nuclear power generation; and (5) all of the co-occurring rare earth elements. Two contamination indices (Igeo and EF) applied to sedimentary metals indicated that Na, Co, Mn, Cd, Pb, Ta, and Cu were each, at some point during the Anthropocene, the most enriched metal pollutants in Great Lakes sediments. Land uses correlated with the metal analytes, such as increases in contaminant metals with the rise in catchment population and increases in carbonate elements (e.g. Ca) with agriculture. Certain contamination trends were observed basin-wide, such as for the atmospheric pollutant Pb, which followed a rise associated with fossil fuel combustion and a decline following the ban of leaded gasoline. Other trends were lake-specific, such as recent high concentrations of Na in Lake Superior, likely due to road salt applications, and a late-20th-century peak in Ca associated with algal whiting events in Lake Ontario. Some metals exceeded guidelines for sediment quality, in some cases prior to European settlement of the basin, indicating that a paleolimnological context is important for appropriate management of sediment contamination. The Great Lakes are sensitive to environmental changes such as pollution by metals, and it is clear that while there has been remedial success, results from the uppermost intervals of cores indicate ongoing problems.https://peerj.com/articles/9034.pdfSediment coresPaleolimnologyGeochemistryGreat LakesMetal pollution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Meagan N. Aliff
Euan D. Reavie
Sara P. Post
Lawrence M. Zanko
spellingShingle Meagan N. Aliff
Euan D. Reavie
Sara P. Post
Lawrence M. Zanko
Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great Lakes
PeerJ
Sediment cores
Paleolimnology
Geochemistry
Great Lakes
Metal pollution
author_facet Meagan N. Aliff
Euan D. Reavie
Sara P. Post
Lawrence M. Zanko
author_sort Meagan N. Aliff
title Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great Lakes
title_short Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great Lakes
title_full Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great Lakes
title_fullStr Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great Lakes
title_full_unstemmed Anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the Laurentian Great Lakes
title_sort anthropocene geochemistry of metals in sediment cores from the laurentian great lakes
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Geochemical analyses applied to lake sedimentary records can reveal the history of pollution by metals and the effects of remedial efforts. Lakes provide ideal environments for geochemical studies because they have steady deposition of fine grained material suitable for fixation of pollutants. The Laurentian Great Lakes are the most studied system in this field, and they have well-preserved chronological profiles. To date, this important system has been considered in parts for inorganic geochemistry, hampering basin-wide conclusions regarding metal contamination. We filled spatial and temporal gaps in a comprehensive geochemical analysis of 11 sediment cores collected from all five Great Lakes. Hierarchical cluster analysis of all Great Lakes samples divided the metal analytes into five functional groups: (1) carbonate elements; (2) metals and oxides with diverse natural sources, including a subgroup of analytes known to be anthropogenically enriched (Cd, Pb, Sn, Zn, and Sb); (3) common crustal elements; (4) metals related to coal and nuclear power generation; and (5) all of the co-occurring rare earth elements. Two contamination indices (Igeo and EF) applied to sedimentary metals indicated that Na, Co, Mn, Cd, Pb, Ta, and Cu were each, at some point during the Anthropocene, the most enriched metal pollutants in Great Lakes sediments. Land uses correlated with the metal analytes, such as increases in contaminant metals with the rise in catchment population and increases in carbonate elements (e.g. Ca) with agriculture. Certain contamination trends were observed basin-wide, such as for the atmospheric pollutant Pb, which followed a rise associated with fossil fuel combustion and a decline following the ban of leaded gasoline. Other trends were lake-specific, such as recent high concentrations of Na in Lake Superior, likely due to road salt applications, and a late-20th-century peak in Ca associated with algal whiting events in Lake Ontario. Some metals exceeded guidelines for sediment quality, in some cases prior to European settlement of the basin, indicating that a paleolimnological context is important for appropriate management of sediment contamination. The Great Lakes are sensitive to environmental changes such as pollution by metals, and it is clear that while there has been remedial success, results from the uppermost intervals of cores indicate ongoing problems.
topic Sediment cores
Paleolimnology
Geochemistry
Great Lakes
Metal pollution
url https://peerj.com/articles/9034.pdf
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