Lead Pollution of Floodplain Soils in a Historic Mining Area--Age, Distribution and Binding Forms
2009
Hürkamp, Kerstin | Raab, Thomas | Völkel, Jörg
Historic lead mining, milling and smelting on the floodplain soils of the upper reaches of the Vils River, Eastern Bavaria, Germany has led to heavy metal contamination within the younger floodplain sediments downstream. This study aims to date the lead pollution and possible primary sources, display and quantify its spatial distribution within the Vils River floodplain in accordance to soil horizons and characterise the binding forms of lead. One hundred fifty profiles were sampled to detect total contents of heavy metals. Sequential extractions were carried out to determine the binding forms; thus, the potential of lead mobility was characterised. The contamination of the floodplain soils act as an alluvial archive, providing a stratigraphical indicator of mining activities and related sedimentation. The age of the sediments displaying the initial lead peak in the alluvial loams corresponds with sediment accumulations at the onset of the mining period and its first phase of prosperity in the sixteenth century. Enrichments of lead in the oxidic gleysols revealed that dissolved fractions of lead precipitate in the groundwater table fluctuation zone. The sequential extraction proved that lead mobility increases in the psammic and hypersceletic fluvial horizons below the flood loams due to the modest salt contents of the extractants and low pH given in these layers. Thus, the risk of the particulate transport of lead has to be extended to include the danger of potential lead solubility in ground and surface waters. Further, the polluted alluvial sediments also act as a source of contamination, leading to the grave danger of the further pollution of so far uncontaminated areas downstream, especially if the reworking and dredging of the material is allowed to occur.
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by National Agricultural Library