Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4436134 Applied Geochemistry 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Mackenzie River Basin (MRB) in NW Canada is one of the least human-impacted large watersheds in the world. The western and eastern sub-basins of the MRB are also marked by contrasting geology, geomorphology, hydrology, and biology. These remarkable differences in a remote river basin provide a unique opportunity to probe the biogeochemical processes governing the sources, transport, and bioavailability of Hg at the terrestrial-marine interface and ultimately in the Arctic Ocean. Based on a large dataset of the concentration and speciation of Hg, S and organic matter in surface sediments across the MRB, a source-apportioned budget was constructed for Hg in the MRB. The results indicate that the Hg flux in the basin originates primarily from the weathering of sulfide minerals in the western mountainous sub-basin (∼78% of the total), followed by the erosion of coal deposits along the mainstream of the Mackenzie River (∼10%), with the remainder split between atmospheric inputs and organic matter-bound Hg (6% and 5%, respectively). Although the Hg flux from the eastern peatland sub-basin only accounts for ∼10% of the total riverine Hg flux, Hg in this region correlates strongly with labile organic matter, and will likely have a much stronger influence on local biota.

► Determination of mercury (Hg) fluxes using speciation of sulfur and organic carbon. ► The majority of the flux is particulate bound, from sulfide weathering. ► Atmospherically-deposited Hg is a minor (<5%) contributor to the total flux. ► Most of the Hg flux is of low bioavailability.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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