YABANCI personel izni Uts KAYDI

Coastal Issues & Management

Past and present mercury flux to a West African crater lake (Lake Bosomtwe/Bosumtwi, Ghana)


Posted on: 15 May, 2017 4:15 pm

Lake sediment cores have been used to reconstruct mercury deposition patterns in many parts of the world; however, no studies to date have used these methods in West Africa, nor are there any published measurements of mercury deposition to this region. We measured mercury in a 210Pb dated sediment core from a meromictic crater lake in West Africa (Lake Bosomtwe, Ghana). Lake Bosomtwe has a very small catchment area to lake area ratio (1.1) and the sediment mercury profile is expected to reflect past and present atmospheric mercury deposition to the lake. Mercury concentrations in sediments as well as mercury flux to the sediments increased from the mid-1800s to latter half of the 1900s, however there has been a sharp decline in mercury flux to Lake Bosomtwe in recent decades. The recent decline in mercury flux to Lake Bosomtwe’s sediments does not appear to be consistent with trends in local, regional or global mercury emissions, and may instead reflect declining global atmospheric mercury concentrations or declining European emissions, highlighting the importance of long-range atmospheric transport of mercury.

 

Past and present mercury flux to a West African crater lake (Lake Bosomtwe/Bosumtwi, Ghana)
Size: 680kB
Name of Author(s):
Amanda E. Poste a, Derek C.G. Muir b, Megan K. Otu a, Roland I. Hall a, Robert E. Hecky a
Institutional Affiliation:
aDepartment of Biology, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, Canada; bAquatic Ecosystem Protection Research Division, Environment Canada, Burlington, ON, Canada.
Type of Publication:
Journal Article
Name of Publisher or Journal:
Science of the Total Environment
Date of Publication:
2012
Number of Pages:
5