Centuries of anthropogenic releases have releases in a global legacy of mercury (Hg) contamination. Here we use a global model to quantify the impact of uncertainty in Hg atmospheric emissions and cycling -On anthropogenic enrichment and discuss implications for future Hg levels. The plausibility of sensitivity simulations is evaluated against multiple independent lines of Observation, including natural archives and direct measurements of present-day environmental Hg concentrations. It has been previously reported that pre-industriaVenrichment recorded in sediment and peat disagree by more than a factor of 10. We find this difference is largely erroneous and caused by comparing peat and sediment against different reference time periods. After correcting this inconsistenr-yi, median enrichment in Hg accumulation since pre-industrial 1760 to 1880 is a factor of 4.3 for peat and 3.0 for sediment. Pre-industrial accumulation in peat and sediment is a factor of greater than the precolonial era (3000-BC to 1550 AD). Model scenarios that omit atmospheric emissions of Hg,froin early mining are inconsistent with observational constraints on the present-day atmospheric, oceanic, and soil Hg reservoirs, as well as the magnitude of enrichment in archives. Future reductions in anthropogenic emissions will initiate a decline in atmospheric concentrations within 1 year, but stabilization of subsurface and deep oaearr Hg levels requires aggressive controls. These findings are robust to the ranges of uncertainty in past emissions arid Hg cycling.

Observational and Modeling Constraints on Global Anthropogenic Enrichment of Mercury

Hedgecock Ian M;
2015

Abstract

Centuries of anthropogenic releases have releases in a global legacy of mercury (Hg) contamination. Here we use a global model to quantify the impact of uncertainty in Hg atmospheric emissions and cycling -On anthropogenic enrichment and discuss implications for future Hg levels. The plausibility of sensitivity simulations is evaluated against multiple independent lines of Observation, including natural archives and direct measurements of present-day environmental Hg concentrations. It has been previously reported that pre-industriaVenrichment recorded in sediment and peat disagree by more than a factor of 10. We find this difference is largely erroneous and caused by comparing peat and sediment against different reference time periods. After correcting this inconsistenr-yi, median enrichment in Hg accumulation since pre-industrial 1760 to 1880 is a factor of 4.3 for peat and 3.0 for sediment. Pre-industrial accumulation in peat and sediment is a factor of greater than the precolonial era (3000-BC to 1550 AD). Model scenarios that omit atmospheric emissions of Hg,froin early mining are inconsistent with observational constraints on the present-day atmospheric, oceanic, and soil Hg reservoirs, as well as the magnitude of enrichment in archives. Future reductions in anthropogenic emissions will initiate a decline in atmospheric concentrations within 1 year, but stabilization of subsurface and deep oaearr Hg levels requires aggressive controls. These findings are robust to the ranges of uncertainty in past emissions arid Hg cycling.
2015
Istituto sull'Inquinamento Atmosferico - IIA
Mercury
legacy
cycling
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/293871
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 159
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 151
social impact