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Sci Total Environ ; 346(1-3): 121-37, 2005 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15993688

ABSTRACT

As part of a wider investigation of the biogeochemistry and fate of Pb deposited from the atmosphere at Glensaugh, a rural upland catchment in N.E. Scotland, the concentration and isotopic composition of Pb were determined in four thinly sectioned monolith cores (25 cm) of peat collected at altitudes of 426--434 m from different faces of Thorter Hill and in a series of 21 10-cm unsectioned cores of peat and organic-rich soil along a transect from near the top (434 m) to the bottom (224 m) of the catchment. Depth profiles of Pb concentration and (206)Pb/(207)Pb ratio were similar for the longer cores. Subsurface Pb maxima (238--489 mg kg(-1)) typically occurred below (206)Pb/(207)Pb minima (1.123-1.134). One core was (210)Pb-dated and had a fairly constant (206)Pb/(207)Pb value of 1.170 from mid-19th century to ca. 1930, followed by a decline (attributable to the increasing influence of Australian Pb of much lower (206)Pb/(207)Pb ratio) to 1.134 by the early 1990s, and then a rapid increase to 1.160 by 2002, after the phased withdrawal of leaded petrol. The fluxes of Pb increased from 15 mg m(-2) year(-1) in the late 19th century to a peak of 60 mg m(-2) year(-1) ca. 1960, before declining steadily to 3.6 mg m(-2) year(-1) by the beginning of the 21st century. Some 40% of the anthropogenic Pb in the core had been deposited prior to 1900. The mean anthropogenic Pb inventory of the four longer cores was 7.4+/-1.5 g m(-2), of which approximately 70% occurred in the top 10 cm, in good agreement with the inventories of the shorter cores collected above 400 m. These inventories are higher than those of the industrial central belt of Scotland, probably because of enhanced deposition at altitude. This is consistent with the derived average (210)Pb flux of 198+/-11 Bq m(-2) year(-1), which is twice that of typical UK (210)Pb deposition and the rainfall for the site. The past deposition of Pb at Glensaugh, including that from sources (e.g., smelting, coal combustion) other than leaded petrol, has clearly been considerable. Even since the introduction of leaded petrol ca. 1930, car-exhaust emissions may have accounted for no more than 35% of the Pb deposited.

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