Heavy‐metal pollution in surficial sediments from the Southern Baltic sea off Poland
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Environmental Science and Health . Part A: Environmental Science and Engineering and Toxicology
- Vol. 31 (10) , 2723-2754
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10934529609376520
Abstract
The Gulf of Gdańsk is one of the pollution “hot spots”; of the Baltic Sea. In order to investigate heavy‐metal pollution there, 31 bulk (Al M of about one, indicating that these elements occur in the sediments dominantly in the clay mineral fraction. Zinc, Cd, Pb, and Ag display an enrichment factor much greater than one and are thought to be dominantly anthropogenic in origin. Grain size plays a significant role in determining element concentrations within the sediments. Systematic trends in the distribution of the heavy metals away from the mouth of the Vistula River were therefore not observed in bulk sediments. However, R‐mode factor analysis discriminated between sediments taken from near the mouths of the Vistula and Reda Rivers and the other sediments and indicated that sediments from near the mouths of those rivers are the most polluted with heavy metals. Present evidence suggests that the heavy metals are introduced into marine sediments in part from atmospheric sources.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chemical and mineralogical forms and mobilization of copper and lead in soils from a Cu‐smelting area in PolandJournal of Environmental Science and Health . Part A: Environmental Science and Engineering and Toxicology, 1994
- Phase-specific bonding of heavy metals in sediments of the Vistula River, PolandApplied Geochemistry, 1993
- Trace metals in lacustrine and marine sediments: A case study from the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern AustraliaChemical Geology, 1990
- Mass-balance of metals and identification of their sources in both river and fallout fluxes near Gdańsk Bay, Baltic SeaScience of The Total Environment, 1990
- Interelemental relationships in organisms and bottom sediments of the southern BalticScience of The Total Environment, 1990
- Heavy‐metal pollution in Manukau and Waitemata Harbours, New ZealandNew Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 1988
- An elemental rationing technique for assessing concentration data from a complex water systemEnvironment International, 1984
- Trace metals in the Pagassitikos Gulf, GreeceEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 1982
- Industrialization affects heavy metal and carbon isotope concentrations in recent Baltic Sea sedimentsGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 1974
- Source characterization for atmospheric trace metals over Kiel BightAtmospheric Environment (1967), 1967