Journal
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 20, Pages 14723-14733Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c04717
Keywords
coal ash; lacustrine sediment; multiproxy tracing; aquatic ecosystems
Categories
Funding
- National Science Foundation
- [EAR-1932649]
- [EAR-1932087]
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A study reveals that the release of coal ash poses significant risks to water quality and ecological health, yet regulation and monitoring of its impacts remain insufficient.
Elevated concentrations of toxic elements in coal ash pose human and ecological health risks upon release to the environment. Despite wide public concerns about water quality and human health risks from catastrophic coal ash spills and chronic leaking of coal ash ponds, coal ash disposal has only been partially regulated, and its impacts on aquatic sediment quality and ecological health have been overlooked. Here, we present a multiproxy approach of morphologic, magnetic, geochemical, and Sr isotopic analyses, revealing unmonitored coal ash releases over the past 40 to 70 years preserved in the sediment records of five freshwater lakes adjacent to coal-fired power plants across North Carolina. We detected significant sediment contamination and potential chronic ecological risks posed by the occurrence of hundreds of thousands of tons of coal ash solids mainly resulting from high-magnitude stormwater runoff/flooding and direct effluent discharge from coal ash disposal sites. The proximity of hundreds of disposal sites to natural waterways across the U.S. implies that such contamination is likely prevalent nationwide and expected to worsen with climate change.
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