Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5751090 Science of The Total Environment 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•On August 17th 1999 an earthquake of Mw = 7.4 hit the İzmit Bay in the Marmara Sea.•PCBs, PAHs, and PBDEs were measured in a sediment core from the Marmara Sea in 2005.•Contaminant profiles well overlap the timing of industrialization in the area.•The massive transport of contaminated sediments is evidenced in the seismo-turbidite.•A scenario of unvaried inputs of pollutants is defined for the period 1980-2005.

The 1999 Mw 7.4 earthquake triggered a tremendous human tragedy and had a great social impact over the population of the Ä°zmit Bay, one of the most industrialized area of Turkey. Although the successive environmental disasters were well documented, information on its sedimentary record is lacking. The present research aims at filling this gap, through the analysis of organic contaminants (PCBs, PAHs, and PBDEs) in a dated sediment core collected in the depocenter of the Karamürsel Basin in 2005. Profiles of total PCBs and total PAHs overlap the timing of industrialization in the area (starting in the 1960s) with values increasing as the population and the number of industrial plants grew larger. Profiles for PBDEs are in accordance with increasing urban inputs but are probably affected by processes of natural formation and post-depositional mixing. The continuous sedimentary record is interrupted at a level dating back to 1980 due to the erosion caused by the 1999 earthquake, having removed a 5-7 cm thick sediment layer. Contaminant concentrations in the deepest 10-15 cm of a 30 cm thick seismo-turbidite unit, triggered by the 1999 event, increase with the progressive fining up and evidence massive transport of sediments from coastal, more polluted sites of the north-eastern Karamürsel shelves and shores. Additional inputs of PAHs are also evident, originating from a fire at the oil refinery that followed the shaking. The effects of the earthquake generated tsunami, its backwash fluxes and the following seiches are not uniquely displayed by each class of contaminants, and they could probably reflect successive inputs deriving from different parts of the basin that are subject to anthropogenic impacts of different nature. Concentrations measured at the top of the core are consistent with an unvaried input of pollutants in the period 1980-2005.

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