| Literature DB >> 24705301 |
N Walraven1, B J H van Os2, G Th Klaver3, J J Middelburg4, G R Davies5.
Abstract
Lake sediments provide a record of atmospheric Pb deposition and changes in Pb isotope composition. To our knowledge, such an approach has not previously been performed in The Netherlands or linked to national air monitoring data. Results are presented for Pb content and isotope composition of (137)Cs dated lake sediments from 2 Dutch urban lakes. Between 1942 and 2002A.D. anthropogenic atmospheric Pb deposition rates in the two lakes varied from 12±2 to 69±16μgcm(-2)year(-1). The rise and fall of leaded gasoline is clearly reflected in the reconstructed atmospheric Pb deposition rates. After the ban on leaded gasoline, late 1970s/early 1980s, atmospheric Pb deposition rates decreased rapidly in the two urban lakes and the relative contributions of other anthropogenic Pb sources - incinerator ash (industrial Pb) and coal/galena - increased sharply. Atmospheric Pb deposition rates inferred from the lake record a clear relationship with nearby measured annual mean air Pb concentrations. Based on this relationship it was estimated that air Pb concentrations between 1942 and 2002A.D. varied between 5 and 293ng/m(3).Entities:
Keywords: Atmospheric; Deposition; Isotopes; Lake; Lead; Sediment
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24705301 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.02.062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963