Department of Biological Sciences, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI 49931, USA.
Environ Sci Process Impacts. 2018 Apr 25;20(4):708-733. doi: 10.1039/c7em00521k.
A geographic enigma is that present-day atmospheric deposition of mercury in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan is low (48%) and that regional industrial emissions have declined substantially (ca. 81% reduction) relative to downstate. Mercury levels should be declining. However, state (MDEQ) surveys of rivers and lakes revealed elevated total mercury (THg) in Upper Peninsula waters and sediment relative to downstate. Moreover, Western Upper Peninsula (WUP) fish possess higher methyl mercury (MeHg) levels than Northern Lower Peninsula (NLP) fish. A contributing explanation for elevated THg loading is that a century ago the Upper Peninsula was a major industrial region, centered on mining. Many regional ores (silver, copper, zinc, massive sulfides) contain mercury in part per million concentrations. Copper smelters and iron furnace-taconite operations broadcast mercury almost continuously for 140 years, whereas mills discharged tailings and old mine shafts leaked contaminated water. We show that mercury emissions from copper and iron operations were substantial (60-650 kg per year) and dispersed over relatively large areas. Moreover, lake sediments in the vicinity of mining operations have higher THg concentrations. Sediment profiles from the Keweenaw Waterway show that THg accumulation increased 50- to 400-fold above modern-day atmospheric deposition levels during active mining and smelting operations, with lingering MeHg effects. High MeHg concentrations are geographically correlated with low pH and dissolved organic carbon (DOC), a consequence of biogeochemical cycling in wetlands, characteristic of the Upper Peninsula. DOC can mobilize metals and elevate MeHg concentrations. We argue that mercury loading from mining is historically superimposed upon strong regional wetland effects, producing a combined elevation of both THg and MeHg in the Western Upper Peninsula.
一个地理谜团是,密歇根州上半岛目前大气汞的沉积量较低(48%),而相对于下半岛,该地区的工业排放量已大幅下降(约减少 81%)。汞含量应该在下降。然而,州(MDEQ)对河流和湖泊的调查显示,上半岛水域和沉积物中的总汞(THg)含量高于下半岛。此外,上半岛西部(WUP)的鱼类所含的甲基汞(MeHg)水平高于下半岛北部(NLP)的鱼类。造成 THg 负荷升高的一个解释是,一个世纪前,上半岛是一个主要的工业地区,以采矿为中心。许多地区的矿石(银、铜、锌、块状硫化物)含有百万分之几浓度的汞。铜冶炼厂和炼铁高炉-磁铁矿工厂连续 140 年不间断地排放汞,而工厂排放尾矿和旧矿坑泄漏受污染的水。我们表明,铜和铁作业的汞排放量很大(每年 60-650 公斤),且分布在相对较大的区域。此外,采矿作业附近的湖泊沉积物中 THg 浓度较高。基威诺水道的沉积物剖面显示,在活跃的采矿和冶炼作业期间,THg 积累量比现代大气沉积水平增加了 50-400 倍,同时还存在 MeHg 的残留效应。MeHg 浓度高与低 pH 值和溶解有机碳(DOC)呈地理相关,这是湿地生物地球化学循环的结果,是上半岛的特征。DOC 可以使金属移动并提高 MeHg 浓度。我们认为,采矿产生的汞负荷在历史上叠加在强大的区域湿地效应之上,导致上半岛西部的 THg 和 MeHg 两者同时升高。