Literature DB >> 21424772

Contaminated lead environments of man: reviewing the lead isotopic evidence in sediments, peat, and soils for the temporal and spatial patterns of atmospheric lead pollution in Sweden.

Richard Bindler1.   

Abstract

Clair Patterson and colleagues demonstrated already four decades ago that the lead cycle was greatly altered on a global scale by humans. Moreover, this change occurred long before the implementation of monitoring programs designed to study lead and other trace metals. Patterson and colleagues also developed stable lead isotope analyses as a tool to differentiate between natural and pollution-derived lead. Since then, stable isotope analyses of sediment, peat, herbaria collections, soils, and forest plants have given us new insights into lead biogeochemical cycling in space and time. Three important conclusions from our studies of lead in the Swedish environment conducted over the past 15 years, which are well supported by extensive results from elsewhere in Europe and in North America, are: (1) lead deposition rates at sites removed from major point sources during the twentieth century were about 1,000 times higher than natural background deposition rates a few thousand years ago (~10 mg Pb m(-2) year(-1) vs. 0.01 mg Pb m(-2) year(-1)), and even today (~1 mg Pb m(-2) year(-1)) are still almost 100 times greater than natural rates. This increase from natural background to maximum fluxes is similar to estimated changes in body burdens of lead from ancient times to the twentieth century. (2) Stable lead isotopes ((206)Pb/(207)Pb ratios shown in this paper) are an effective tool to distinguish anthropogenic lead from the natural lead present in sediments, peat, and soils for both the majority of sites receiving diffuse inputs from long range and regional sources and for sites in close proximity to point sources. In sediments >3,500 years and in the parent soil material of the C-horizon, (206)Pb/(207)Pb ratios are higher, 1.3 to >2.0, whereas pollution sources and surface soils and peat have lower ratios that have been in the range 1.14-1.18. (3) Using stable lead isotopes, we have estimated that in southern Sweden the cumulative anthropogenic burden of atmospherically deposited lead is ~2-5 g Pb m(-2) and ~1 g Pb m(-2) in the "pristine" north. Half of this cumulative total was deposited before industrialization. (4) In the vicinity of the Rönnskär smelter in northern Sweden, a major point source during the twentieth century, there is an isotopic pattern that deviates from the general trends elsewhere, reflecting the particular history of ore usage at Rönnskär, which further demonstrates the chronological record of lead loading recorded in peat and in soil mor horizons.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21424772     DOI: 10.1007/s10653-011-9381-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Geochem Health        ISSN: 0269-4042            Impact factor:   4.609


  32 in total

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2.  Atmospheric Pb deposition in Spain during the last 4600 years recorded by two ombrotrophic peat bogs and implications for the use of peat as archive.

Authors:  A Martinez Cortiza; E García-Rodeja; X Pontevedra Pombal; J C Nóvoa Muñoz; D Weiss; A Cheburkin
Journal:  Sci Total Environ       Date:  2002-06-20       Impact factor: 7.963

3.  History and environmental impact of mining activity in Celtic Aeduan territory recorded in a peat bog (Morvan, France).

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Journal:  Environ Sci Technol       Date:  2004-02-01       Impact factor: 9.028

4.  Lead migration in forest soils: response to changing atmospheric inputs.

Authors:  E K Miller; A J Friedland
Journal:  Environ Sci Technol       Date:  1994-04-01       Impact factor: 9.028

5.  Sequential extraction combined with isotope analysis as a tool for the investigation of lead mobilisation in soils: application to organic-rich soils in an upland catchment in Scotland.

Authors:  Jeffrey R Bacon; John G Farmer; Sarah M Dunn; Margaret C Graham; Susan I Vinogradoff
Journal:  Environ Pollut       Date:  2005-10-24       Impact factor: 8.071

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7.  The isotopic record of atmospheric lead fall-out on an Icelandic salt marsh since AD 50.

Authors:  William A Marshall; Robert Clough; W Roland Gehrels
Journal:  Sci Total Environ       Date:  2009-01-20       Impact factor: 7.963

8.  Greenland ice evidence of hemispheric lead pollution two millennia ago by greek and roman civilizations.

Authors:  S Hong; J P Candelone; C C Patterson; C F Boutron
Journal:  Science       Date:  1994-09-23       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  Root uptake of lead by Norway spruce grown on 210Pb spiked soils.

Authors:  M F Hovmand; S P Nielsen; I Johnsen
Journal:  Environ Pollut       Date:  2008-11-14       Impact factor: 8.071

10.  History of atmospheric lead deposition since 12,370 (14)C yr BP from a peat bog, jura mountains, switzerland

Authors: 
Journal:  Science       Date:  1998-09-11       Impact factor: 47.728

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4.  Comment on "Next-Generation Ice Core Technology Reveals True Minimum Natural Levels of Lead (Pb) in the Atmosphere: Insights From the Black Death" by More et al.

Authors:  Richard Bindler
Journal:  Geohealth       Date:  2018-05-31

5.  The Role of Historical Context in Understanding Past Climate, Pollution and Health Data in Trans-disciplinary Studies: Reply to Comments on More et al., 2017.

Authors:  Alexander F More; Nicole E Spaulding; Pascal Bohleber; Michael J Handley; Helene Hoffmann; Elena V Korotkikh; Andrei V Kurbatov; Christopher P Loveluck; Sharon B Sneed; Michael McCormick; Paul A Mayewski
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