Climate-Associated Changes in Mercury Sources in the Arctic Fjord Sediments SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 4 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 3 time in Scopus
Title
Climate-Associated Changes in Mercury Sources in the Arctic Fjord Sediments
Author(s)
Lee, Ju Hyeon; Kwon, Sae Yun; Lee, Hoin; Nam, Seung-Il; Kim, Jung-Hyun; Joo, Young Ji; Jang, Kwangchul; Kim, Haryun; Yin, Runsheng
KIOST Author(s)
KIM, Ha Ryun(김하련)
Alternative Author(s)
김하련
Publication Year
2021-09-16
Abstract
Despite the large climatic fluctuations in the Arctic over the Holocene, the dominant mercury (Hg) sources and the potential changes in Hg sources associated with the climate remain unclear. Here, we use Hg isotopes to reconstruct changes in Hg sources and processes in two Svalbard fjord sediment cores spanning the Holocene. The Hg isotope ratios of the fjord sediment cores are similar to bedrock and Hg bound to terrestrial total organic carbon (TOC) but different from other sediment cores influenced by atmospheric Hg drawdowns via the sinking of marine particulate organic matter. The absence of significant Hg and TOC relationships indicates that bedrock erosion caused by glacier dynamics is the major Hg source to the fjord sediment rather than those bound to marine and terrestrial TOC. Measurable shifts in Hg sources are observed at regional cooling (4.3 ka) and during the Medieval Warm Period in the late Holocene. The negative shift in δ202Hg (by -0.5‰) at 4.3 ka from baseline (∼10 ka) is consistent with the rapid increase in glacier-mediated physical and chemical erosions of bedrock. The significant positive shifts in δ202Hg (by 0.5‰) in the late Holocene are explained by enhanced input of atmospheric Hg and its drawdown via the sinking of marine particulate organic matter and some anthropogenic influence, which suppressed the positive Δ199Hg and Δ200Hg shifts. This study suggests that Hg isotope ratios measured in sedimentary archives can be used to decipher climate and other local to global changes modifying Hg sources in the Arctic. © 2021 American Chemical Society.
ISSN
2472-3452
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/42153
DOI
10.1021/acsearthspacechem.1c00095
Bibliographic Citation
ACS EARTH AND SPACE CHEMISTRY, v.5, no.9, pp.2398 - 2407, 2021
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Subject
MASS-INDEPENDENT FRACTIONATION; GREAT-LAKES PRECIPITATION; ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION; HG ISOTOPES; HOLOCENE; DEPOSITION; RECORD; CONTAMINATION; GEOCHEMISTRY; ENVIRONMENT
Keywords
stable isotope; Holocene; climate change; sediment core; proxy; reconstruction; Svalbard; Dicksonfjorden; Woodfjorden
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.

qrcode

Items in ScienceWatch@KIOST are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse