4.7 Article

Isotopic composition of lead in moss and soil of the European Arctic

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 68, Issue 12, Pages 2613-2622

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2003.12.019

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Moss, O and C horizons of podzols, mainly forming complementary sample triplets, as well as filter residues of molten snow from northern Norway, northern Finland and NW Russia have been analyzed by TIMS for their Pb isotopic composition in order to study the impacts of local geogenic/anthropogenic sources and long range atmospheric transport on the Pb balance in the European Arctic. Samples were taken along two N-S transects covering an area of similar to188.000 km(2), including both pristine environments in the W and certain regions towards the E severely contaminated by heavy metal emissions originating from large nickel smelters and processing plants in NW Russia. The lead in moss and O horizon samples clearly reflects atmospheric deposition, as it displays overall uniform isotope ratios and is decoupled from the geogenic background, i.e. the underlying mineral soils in the C horizon. Moss and O horizon samples from the eastern N-S transect are isotopically indistinguishable from those taken along the western transect but their Pb concentrations tend to be similar to2 times higher. This points to considerable contamination originating from the nearby Russian industrial and urban centers. However, isotopic signals of emissions from individual industrial point sources cannot be unambiguously identified because they lack characteristic isotope signatures. Pb derived from gasoline additives is swamped by Pb from other sources and can also be excluded as a major contributor to the environmental Pb in the European Arctic. Overall, the Pb isotopic signatures of moss and O horizon overlap values recorded in atmospheric lead all over central and southern Europe, more than 2000 km south of the study area. This may be taken as indicating continent-wide mixing of Pb derived from similar sources in the atmosphere or as reflecting economic globalization, or both O horizon samples, which accumulate lead over 20-30 yr, conform to a distinct Pb isotope reference line in Pb-207/Pb-206 VS. Pb-208/Pb-206 space (European Standard Pollution, ESP) defined by atmospheric Pb considered to be representative for the technical civilization in Europe. Conversely, the Arctic moss samples with a lifetime of <3 yr display a deviating linear trend reflecting a recent change of atmospheric input towards significantly more radiogenic Pb derived from Mississippi Valley-type ores in the U.S., fully compatible with signatures found in epiphytic lichens from Canada, but also in Pb from urban waste incinerators in central Europe. Considering the elevated Pb concentrations in moss collected along the eastern N-S transect, this congruence indicates that the Pb in moss of the European Arctic most probably originates from the nearby Russian centers of urbanization and not from transatlantic transport. We therefore suspect imported industrial goods and their subsequent attrition to be a more plausible explanation for the appearance of MVT lead in Europe. Copyright (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd.

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