| Literature DB >> 30081370 |
Stella Tamburrino1, Salvatore Passaro2, Mattia Barsanti3, Antonio Schirone3, Ivana Delbono3, Fabio Conte3, Roberta Delfanti3, Maria Bonsignore4, Marianna Del Core4, Serena Gherardi2, Mario Sprovieri4.
Abstract
In continental margins, canyons appear to act as natural conduits of sediments and organic matter from the shelf to deep basins, providing an efficient physical pathway for transport and accumulation of particles with their associated land-produced contaminants. However, these mechanisms have not been yet sufficiently explored by geochemical markers. The continental slope of the south Sardinia has been used as a natural laboratory for investigating mechanisms and times of transfer dynamics of contaminants from land to sea and from shelf to deep sea through an articulated system of submarine canyons. Here, dynamics of contaminants have been investigated in a pilot area of the central Mediterranean basin (Gulf of Cagliari, S Sardinia) where important industrial plants are sited since beginning of the last century. Five sediment cores dated by 210Pb and 137Cs reveal: i) a complex dynamics of organic and inorganic contaminants from point source areas on land to the deep sea and ii) a crucial role played by canyons and bottom morphology as primary pathway conveying sediments and associated contaminants from sources to very far deep sea environments. In particular, this study provides new integrated tools to properly understand mechanisms of connection between coastal sectors and deep sea. This is challenging mostly in regions where coastal pollution could represent critical threats for larger areas of the Mediterranean Sea.Entities:
Keywords: (210)Pb and (137)Cs inventories; Deep sea; Pollution focusing; Submarine canyons; Tyrrhenian Sea
Year: 2018 PMID: 30081370 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.07.467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963