4.8 Article

Stable Lead Isotope Compositions In Selected Coals From Around The World And Implications For Present Day Aerosol Source Tracing

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 4, Pages 1078-1085

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es801818r

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The phasing out of leaded gasoline in many countries around the world at the end of the last millennium has resulted in a complex mixture of lead sources in the atmosphere. Recent studies suggest that coal combustion has become an important source of Pb in aerosols in urban and remote areas. Here, we report lead concentration and isotopic composition for 59 coal samples representing major coal deposits worldwide in an attempt to characterize this potential source. The average concentration in these coals is 35 mu g Pb g(-1), with the highest values in coals from Spain and Peru and the lowest in coals from Australia and North America. The Pb-206/Pb-207 isotope ratios range between 1.15 and 1.24, with less radiogenic Pb in coals from Europe and Asia compared to South and North America. Comparing the Pb isotopic signatures of coalsfromthis and previous studies with those published for Northern and Southern Hemisphere aerosols, we hypothesize that coal combustion might now be an important Pb source in China, the eastern U.S., and to some extent, in Europe but not as yet in other regions including South Africa, South America, and western U.S. This supports the notion that old Pb pollution from leaded gasoline reemitted into the atmosphere or long-range transport (i.e., from China to the western U.S.) is important Comparing the isotope ratios of the coals, the age of the deposits, and Pb isotope evolution models for the major geochemical reservoirs suggests that the PbIC in coals is strongly influenced by the depositional coal forming environment.

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