1 / 19

NAWQA Trends: Objectives

USGS NAWQA Contaminant Trends in Lake Sediment study: reconstructing historical trends in metals and hydrophobic organic contaminants using sediment cores. NAWQA Trends: Objectives. Identify trends in metals and organic compounds in U.S. surface waters,

greg
Download Presentation

NAWQA Trends: Objectives

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. USGS NAWQA Contaminant Trends in Lake Sediment study: reconstructing historical trends in metals and hydrophobic organic contaminants using sediment cores

  2. NAWQA Trends: Objectives Identify trends in metals and organic compounds in U.S. surface waters, Characterize relations between the trends and changes in land use and environmental regulations, Improve our understanding of transport processes and fate of contaminants in aquatic sediment, Identify and quantify major urban sources of contaminants transported to lakes. CTLS: http://tx.usgs.gov/coring/index.html

  3. Paleolimnology core

  4. Standard Analyses Metals OCs PAHs Rads • Arsenic* • Cadmium* • Chromium • Copper • Mercury* • Nickel • Lead* • Zinc • DDT* • DDE* • DDD* • Total PCBs* • Dieldrin* • Chlordane* • Naphthalene • Fluorene • Phananthrene • Anthracene • Fluoranthene • Pyrene • Benz[a]anthracene • Chrysene • Benzo[a]pyrene* • Total PAH* • 137Cs • 210Pb • 226Ra *EPA/ATSDR top 20 priority pollutant

  5. Emerging Contaminants • Nonylphenols (surfactants, emulsifiers) • Tri (…) phosphates (flame retardants) • AHTN, HHCB (fragrances (musk)) • PFOS (stain guard, teflon) • PCNs (plastics, industrial apps.) • Pharmaceuticals • Anthraquinone (pulp and paper, dye) • Indole (fragrance, inert ingredient) • Cholesterol • Phenol, p-cresol (inert ingredients, industrial apps.) • Triclosan (anti-bacterial) • PBDEs (flame retardants)

  6. Lakes Sampled from 1996-2007

  7. Decrease in releases   decreasing trends Trends since the 1970s

  8. Mixed Signals And a signal of concern

  9. The “urban airshed” and atmospheric deposition of contaminants

  10. Atmospheric deposition of Hg and PAHs is 8 times greater in Boston (SRV) than 200 km north (CRK) SRV:CRK 8:1

  11. Atmospheric versus local urban sources SRV MYS SRV MYS

  12. Fluvial inputs swamp out atmospheric deposition, even when atmospheric deposition is large MYS:SRV 30:1

  13. Determining atmospheric fallout rates: Dual-core mass-balance model Relations between concentration and mass flux in cores can tell us where contaminants came from Van Metre and Fuller, in review, ES&T

  14. 2008-2010 coring sites

  15. Current funded 2009 workplan for California • Two reference lakes • Sierras • Bay Area • E vs W • Potential Bay Area add-ons: • 1 urban lake • 1 add’l reference lake

  16. What are we looking for in a lake? • Requirements • Freshwater • Lake or reservoir (reservoir 40+ yrs old) • Access • Undisturbed sediment record • No water diverted in or away • Reference lake • Pristine watershed • Small DA:SA • Urban lake • Large watershed with mixed residential and commercial land use

  17. Sierras reference lakes?

  18. Bay Area reference lake(s)

  19. Urban lakes? Lake Merced • 100-yr history • Large urban watershed • Hasn’t been dredged • No water diverted in • BUT most storm runoff diverted to CSOsocean

More Related