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Influence of transboundary transport of trace elements on mountain peat geochemistry (Sudetes, Central Europe)

Barbara Fiałkiewicz-Kozieł, Edyta Łokas, Mariusz Gałka, Piotr Kołaczek, François De Vleeschouwer, Gaël Le Roux, Beata Smieja-Król

2020Quaternary Science Reviews31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mountain ombrotrophic peatlands in Central Europe are an important stock of transboundary contamination both of natural and anthropogenic origin. The Sniezka Mountain (West Sudetes) forms a sig- _ nificant orographic barrier and receives aerosols from broadly-recognized anthropogenic sources (production and use of stainless steel, processing of uranium, coal combustion, nuclear weapon tests, and Chernobyl accident). The main objective of the study was to assess the pattern of distribution and origin of trace elements and to distinguish the long-range transport vs. local signals in two 210Pb and 14C e dated peat cores from the highest summit of the Karkonosze (West Sudetes) spanning the last 280 years. Maximum values and accumulations of almost all investigated elements (Pb, Zn, Cu, Ni, Cr, Ti, Al, U, Sc, and REE) were identified around the 1970s. The analysis of peat using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) confirmed the occurrence of spheroidal aluminosilicate fly ash particles (SAP) in the topmost 40 cm (from AD 1938) together with a maximum of mullite (3Al2O3$2SiO2), an anthropogenic marker originating from coal-based power plants. The overall 206Pb/207Pb signature ranges from 1.160 to 1.173, indicating a predominant contribution of anthropogenic Pb. Human activities promote the release of mobile 234U, due to the weaker bonds to mineral structure, and cause the radiogenic disequilibrium between 238U and its daughter 234U.

Topics & Concepts

OmbrotrophicPeatGeochemistryGeologyRadiogenic nuclideCoalSedimentologyOrographic liftEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental chemistryEarth sciencePhysical geographyBogArchaeologyMantle (geology)ChemistryGeographyPrecipitationMeteorologyGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchHeavy metals in environmentLichen and fungal ecology