Beal Samuel A, Kelly Meredith A, Stroup Justin S, Jackson Brian P, Lowell Thomas V, Tapia Pedro M
Department of Earth Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
Department of Geology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Global Biogeochem Cycles. 2014 Apr;28(4):437-450. doi: 10.1002/2013gb004780. Epub 2014 Mar 31.
Mercury (Hg) is a toxic metal that is transported globally through the atmosphere. The emission of Hg from mineral reservoirs and subsequent recycling in surface reservoirs (i.e., soil/biomass, ocean, and atmosphere) are fundamental to the modern global Hg cycle, yet past emissions from anthropogenic and natural sources are not fully constrained. We use a sediment core from Yanacocha, a headwater lake in southeastern Peru, to study the anthropogenic and natural controls on atmospheric Hg deposition during the Holocene. From 12.3 to 3.5 ka, Hg fluxes in the record are relatively constant (mean ± 1σ: 1.4 ± 0.6 μg m a, . Past Hg deposition does not correlate with changes in regional temperature and precipitation, inferred from nearby paleoclimate records, or with most large volcanic events that occurred regionally, in the Andean Central Volcanic Zone (~300-400 km from Yanacocha), and globally. In B.C. 1450 (3.4 ka), Hg fluxes abruptly increased and reached the Holocene-maximum flux (6.7 μg m a) in B.C. 1200, concurrent with a ~100-year peak in Fe and chalcophile metals (As, Ag, Tl) and the presence of framboidal pyrite. Continuously elevated Hg fluxes from B.C. 1200-500 suggest a protracted mining-dust source near Yanacocha that is identical in timing to documented pre-Incan cinnabar mining in central Peru. During Incan and Colonial time (A.D. 1450-1650), Hg deposition remains elevated relative to background levels but lower relative to other Hg records from sediment cores in central Peru, indicating a limited spatial extent of preindustrial Hg emissions. Hg fluxes from A.D. 1980 to 2011 (4.0 ± 1.0 μg m a, ) are 3.0 ± 1.5 times greater than pre-anthropogenic fluxes and are similar to modern fluxes documented in remote lakes around the world.
汞(Hg)是一种有毒金属,通过大气在全球范围内传输。汞从矿物储库中的排放以及随后在地表储库(即土壤/生物量、海洋和大气)中的再循环是现代全球汞循环的基础,但过去人为和自然源的排放尚未得到充分限制。我们使用来自秘鲁东南部源头湖泊亚纳科查的一个沉积岩芯,来研究全新世期间大气汞沉降的人为和自然控制因素。在距今12300年至3500年期间,记录中的汞通量相对恒定(平均值±1σ:1.4±0.6微克/平方米/年)。过去的汞沉降与根据附近古气候记录推断的区域温度和降水变化,或与区域内(安第斯中央火山带,距离亚纳科查约300 - 400公里)以及全球发生的大多数大型火山事件均无关联。公元前1450年(3400年前),汞通量突然增加,并在公元前1200年达到全新世最大通量(6.7微克/平方米/年),同时铁和亲硫金属(砷、银、铊)出现约100年的峰值,且存在莓球状黄铁矿。公元前1200年至500年期间汞通量持续升高,表明亚纳科查附近存在长期的矿尘源,其时间与秘鲁中部有记录的印加前朱砂开采时间一致。在印加和殖民时期(公元1450年至1650年),汞沉降相对于背景水平仍然较高,但相对于秘鲁中部沉积岩芯的其他汞记录则较低,这表明工业化前汞排放的空间范围有限。公元1980年至2011年期间的汞通量(4.0±1.0微克/平方米/年)比人为活动前的通量高3.0±1.5倍,与世界各地偏远湖泊记录的现代通量相似。