Mercury in Sediments and Sediment Pore Water in the Laurentian Trough
- 1 August 1993
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
- Vol. 50 (8) , 1794-1800
- https://doi.org/10.1139/f93-201
Abstract
The concentration of dissolved mercury in the pore water of Laurentian Trough sediments varies between the detection limit (2.5 pM) and 64 pM, up to an order of magnitude enriched relative to the overlying water. Dissolved mercury is low near the sediment surface, increases with depth to 5 cm, and then decreases with further depth. Redistribution of remobilized mercury within the sediment column is, however, insufficient to explain the observed depth variations in mercury concentration. In the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary, the vertical profiles of mercury in trough sediments tend to be consistent with the chronology of mercury discharges from chlor-alkali plants located in the St. Lawrence drainage basin. The total amount of anthropogenic mercury in sediments deposited below the 200-m isobath in the entire lower St. Lawrence Estuary since the beginning of industrialization is estimated as 170 ± 85 × 103 kg, about six times the amount of natural mercury that has accumulated during the same period. Near the seaward end of the Trough in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, sedimentary mercury concentrations are much lower than in the Estuary, with a significant portion of the anthropogenic mercury deposited in the sediments probably coming from the atmosphere.Keywords
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