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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 408(13): 2768-75, 2010 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20398915

ABSTRACT

Concentrations of dissolved organic carbon have increased in many, but not all, surface waters across acid impacted areas of Europe and North America over the last two decades. Over the last eight years several hypotheses have been put forward to explain these increases, but none are yet accepted universally. Research in this area appears to have reached a stalemate between those favouring declining atmospheric deposition, climate change or land management as the key driver of long-term DOC trends. While it is clear that many of these factors influence DOC dynamics in soil and stream waters, their effect varies over different temporal and spatial scales. We argue that regional differences in acid deposition loading may account for the apparent discrepancies between studies. DOC has shown strong monotonic increases in areas which have experienced strong downward trends in pollutant sulphur and/or seasalt deposition. Elsewhere climatic factors, that strongly influence seasonality, have also dominated inter-annual variability, and here long-term monotonic DOC trends are often difficult to detect. Furthermore, in areas receiving similar acid loadings, different catchment characteristics could have affected the site specific sensitivity to changes in acidity and therefore the magnitude of DOC release in response to changes in sulphur deposition. We suggest that confusion over these temporal and spatial scales of investigation has contributed unnecessarily to the disagreement over the main regional driver(s) of DOC trends, and that the data behind the majority of these studies is more compatible than is often conveyed.


Subject(s)
Carbon/analysis , Fresh Water/chemistry , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Acid Rain , Kinetics , Rain , Temperature , Time , Water Pollution, Chemical/statistics & numerical data
2.
J Contam Hydrol ; 53(3-4): 285-304, 2001 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11820474

ABSTRACT

A Triassic sandstone aquifer polluted with a mixture of phenolic hydrocarbons has been investigated by means of high-resolution groundwater sampling. Samples taken at depth intervals of 1 m have revealed the presence of a diving pollutant plume with a sharply defined upper margin. Concentrations of pollutant phenols exceed 4 g/l in the plume core, rendering it sterile but towards the diluted upper margin evidence for bacterial sulphate reduction (BSR) has been obtained. Groundwaters have been analysed for both delta34S-SO4 and delta18O-SO4. Two reservoirs have been identified with distinct sulphate oxygen isotope ratios. Groundwater sulphate (delta18O-SO4 = 3-5/1000) outside the plume shows a simple linear mixing trend with an isotopically uniform pollutant sulphate reservoir (delta18O-SO4 = 10-12/1000) across the plume margin. The sulphur isotope ratios do not always obey a simple mixing relation, however, at one multilevel borehole, enrichment in 34SO4 at the plume margin is inversely correlated with sulphate concentration. This and the presence of 34S-depleted dissolved sulphide indicate that enrichment in 34SO4 is the result of bacterial sulphate reduction. Delta34S analysis of trace hydrogen sulphide within the plume yielded an isotope enrichment factor (epsilon) of -9.4/1000 for present-day bacterial sulphate reduction. This value agrees with a long-term estimate (-9.9/1000) obtained from a Rayleigh model of the sulphate reduction process. The model was also used to obtain an estimate of the pre-reduction sulphate concentration profile with depth. The difference between this and the present-day profiles then gave a mass balance for sulphate consumption. The organic carbon mineralisation that would account for this sulphate loss is shown to represent only 0.1/1000 of the phenol concentration in this region of the plume. Hence, the contribution of bacterial sulphate reduction to biodegradation has thus far been small. The highest total phenolic concentration (TPC) at which there is sulphur isotope evidence of bacterial sulphate reduction is 2000 mg/l. We suggest that above this concentration, the bactericidal properties of phenol render sulphate-reducing bacteria inactive. Dissolved sulphate trapped in the concentrated plume core will only be utilised by sulphate reducers when toxic phenols in the plume are diluted by dispersion during migration.


Subject(s)
Phenols/analysis , Sulfates/analysis , Sulfur-Reducing Bacteria/metabolism , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Biodegradation, Environmental , Kinetics , Oxidation-Reduction , Refuse Disposal , United Kingdom
3.
J Contam Hydrol ; 53(3-4): 305-18, 2001 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11820475

ABSTRACT

A natural groundwater system modified by pollutant phenols and agricultural nitrate has been modelled in the laboratory by a series of sacrificial microcosm experiments. Samples of aquifer sediment and groundwater from the margin of the phenol plume were used to inoculate anaerobic microcosms enriched in nitrate and pollutant phenols. Rapid degradation of phenol and p-cresol was observed over a 35-day period leading to the generation of inorganic carbon and a number of transient intermediates. O-cresol proved to be recalcitrant on the experimental time-scale. A mass balance calculation shows that, during degradation, carbon was conserved in the aqueous phase. Groundwater-sediment interactions were monitored using carbon stable isotope data. A mass balance for solution TIC indicates thatp-cresol degradation stimulated the dissolution of sedimentary carbonate phases due to the formation of carbonic acid. Compound-specific carbon isotope analysis (GC-IRMS) was used to search for 13C enrichment in residual p-cresol. A slight enrichment trend (epsilon = -2.5/1000) was tentatively identified. The potential of this fractionation effect for obtaining in situ degradation rates is discussed. Results from the microcosm experiments help to explain the observed distribution of nitrate and phenols within the polluted aquifer.


Subject(s)
Nitrates/analysis , Phenols/analysis , Water Microbiology , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Bacteria/metabolism , Biodegradation, Environmental , Carbon Isotopes , Flame Ionization , Kinetics , United Kingdom
4.
Environ Pollut ; 91(3): 325-32, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15091425

ABSTRACT

Recent (<7 years old) cave sediments in Speedwell Cavern, Derbyshire, show an approximately exponential decay of organic carbon with depth. This phenomenon was thought to be due to one of two causes: (i) changing agricultural practice within the catchment feeding the cave, especially the increased use of sewage sludge and animal slurry as fertilizer; (ii) a relatively constant organic carbon concentration over time in the input sediment, with subsequent carbon mineralization during diagenesis. Carbon isotope composition of the organic material and the evolution of H/C ratio with depth indicate that the latter hypothesis is correct and that the profiles result from microbial diagenesis, not increased organic carbon inputs. By comparison with sediment of known (7 years) age, temporal decay constants for organic matter can be derived; these lie between rates previously determined for organic matter decomposition in marine sediments and soils. The H/C ratio of organic matter can be modelled as a function of time and proceeds in a similar fashion to soil organic material.

5.
Environ Geochem Health ; 15(1): 21-5, 1993 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24198078

ABSTRACT

Erosion of the Edale shales of Derbyshire during the Tertiary and Quaternary has resulted in sediment deposits in and on the underlying karstified limestones. Sorting during sedimentation has generated clay-rich sediments which are uranium enriched due to a clay association of uranium in the shales. Radon production in these sediments is at or close to equilibrium with their uranium content, and their fine grain-size ensures efficient radon release. Such sediments are therefore potent local sources of environmental radon.

6.
Environ Geochem Health ; 13(2): 119-26, 1991 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24202845

ABSTRACT

Flue gas desulphurisation (FGD) equipment to be fitted to UK coal-fired power stations will produce more than 0.8 Mtonnes of calcium sulphate, as gypsum. Most gypsum should be of commercial quality, but any low grade material disposed as waste has the potential to generate a range of sulphur gases, including H2S, COS, CS2, DMS and DMDS. Literature data from the USA indicates that well-oxidised waste with a high proportion of calcium sulphate (the main UK product of FGD) has relatively low emissions of sulphur gases, which are comparable to background levels from inland soils. However, sulphur gas fluxes are greatly enhanced where reducing conditions become established within the waste, hence disposal strategies should be formulated to prevent the sub-surface consumption of oxygen.

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