4.7 Article

Inventory of aquatic contaminant flux arising from historical metal mining in England and Wales

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 408, 期 17, 页码 3576-3583

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2010.04.021

关键词

Metal mine; Pollution; Flux; Mine water; Inventory

资金

  1. UK Government Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)
  2. Environment Agency (England and Wales)
  3. Department for Communities and Local Government (Defra) [WQ0601]
  4. Environment Agency [SC030136/14]

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The impact of discharges from abandoned metal and ironstone mines has been a much studied form of aquatic pollution in recent decades. Few attempts however, have been made to accurately determine the overall contaminant mass flux arising from abandoned mine sites at scales above catchment level. Such assessments are critical to determine the significance of former mining to national, regional and ultimately global trace metal flux. This paper presents the most comprehensive national survey to date across England and Wales of the total pollution burden discharged at source from abandoned non-coal mine sites. 338 discharges have been identified (from 4923 known abandoned metal mines) and while concurrent flow and contaminant concentration records are only available for around 30% of these, significant quantities of metals (and As) have been quantified to be discharged. A minimum of 193 tonnes of Zn, 18.5 tonnes of Pb, 0.64 tonnes Cd, 19.1 tonnes of Cu, 551 tonnes Fe, 72 tonnes Mn and 5.1 tonnes As are released in water discharges from abandoned non-coal mines to the surface water environment of England and Wales each year. Precautionary extrapolation of mass fluxes based on the frequency distribution of measured concentration and flow data, for discharges with absent data, suggests that the actual total mass flux for these contaminants could be up to 41% higher. The mass flux of Pb released from mines exceeds that of all currently permitted discharges (e.g. active industrial sites and wastewater treatment works) to surface waters across England and Wales, while those of As. Cd and Zn are of a similar magnitude. These data put into context the enduring legacy of historic mining on the water environment, highlighting its significance relative to more highly regulated polluting sites. Comparison of the figures with estimates of global trace metal flux suggests that the national total identified here is significant on a global scale. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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