Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6330166 | Science of The Total Environment | 2014 | 9 Pages |
â¢Icelandic glacial-fed rivers show high dissolved REE and HFSE concentrations.â¢Volcanic ash, filter residues and river waters show similar REE and HFSE patterns.â¢Volcanic ash particles < 450 nm control dissolved REE and HFSE concentrations.â¢River water composition confirms that volcanic ashes contain natural nanoparticles.
Volcanic ashes are often referenced as examples for natural nanoparticles, yet the particle size distribution <Â 1000Â nm is only rarely documented. We here report results of a geochemical study of glacial-fed rivers, glacial surface runoff, glacial base flow, and pure glacial meltwater from southern Iceland, that had been sampled 25Â days after the explosive eruptions at Eyjafjallajökull in 2010. In addition to the dissolved concentrations of rare earth elements (REE), Zr, Hf, Nb, and Th in the 450Â nm-filtered waters, we also studied the respective filter residues (river particulates >Â 450Â nm) and volcanic ash. In spite of the low solubilities and high particle-reactivities of the elements studied, most water samples show high dissolved concentrations, such as up to 971Â ng/kg of Ce and 501Â ng/kg of Zr. Except for the pure glacial meltwater and glacial base flow, all waters display the same shale-normalized REE patterns with pronounced light and heavy REE depletion and positive Eu anomalies. While such patterns are unusual for river waters, they are similar to those of the respective river particulates and the volcanic ash, though at different concentration levels. The distribution of dissolved Zr, Hf, Nb, and Th in the waters also matches that of filter residues and ash. This strongly suggests that in all 450Â nm-filtered river waters, the elements studied are associated with solid ash particles smaller than 450Â nm. This reveals that volcanic ash-derived nanoparticles and colloids are present in these glacial-fed rivers and that such ultrafine particles control the trace element distribution in the surface runoff. Subsequent to explosive volcanic eruptions, these waters provide terrigenous input from landmasses to estuaries, that is characterized by a unique trace element signature and that subsequent to modification by estuarine processes delivers a pulse of nutrients to coastal seawater in regions not affected by plume fall-out.