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Distributions and Speciation of Mercury and Arsenic in sediments from Kaoping Coastal Areas and Lagoons

The purposes of this study are to evaluate and elucidate distribution patterns, speciation and pollution status of As and Hg in coastal sediments. The study focuses on coastal zones off southwestern Taiwan including the Kaoping River estuary, the Kaoping Canyon, Chiku and Tapong lagoons. Experimental results show that As and Hg in surface sediments from the Kaoping River estuary are mainly associated with mud (clay+silt) and TOC. They may also co-precipitate with Fe-Mn oxides/ hydroxides in sediments. Consequently, the seasonal variability of As and Hg distributions in estuarine sediments is likely attributed to the variations of particles size and TOC contents.
Distributions of As in surface sediments from the Kaoping Canyon are also related closely to mud, Fe-Mn oxides and TOC contents. The spatial variation of surface enrichment of As, however, is insignificant along the Kaoping Canyon. Concentrations of Hg in surface sediments are elevated around the river mouth and decrease seaward in the Kaoping Canyon. According to As and Hg distributions and accumulation rates in the Kaoping Canyon, pollution appears to increase significantly around 1970 corresponding to the period of economic boom in Taiwan.
With the exception of locations near the Chiku River and Daliao Creek, spatial distributions of As and Hg are largely determined by particle size, organic and Fe-Mn contents. In the Tapong Bay, concentrations and enrichments of As and Hg are generally higher in the inner bay than in the outer bay, primarily affected by distributions of particle size, organic and Fe-Mn contents. The enrichment of Hg in the inner bay appears to be enhanced by waste-water discharge, TOC accumulation and sulphide formation. The magnitudes of EF are larger in the Tapong Bay than in the Chiku Lagoon and the Kaoping River estuary for both As and Hg, indicating a higher pollution status in the Tapong Bay than in other areas.
Sequential extractions separate As and Hg into five fractions that can be roughly divided into mobile phase and non-mobile phase (residual fraction). The sum of mobile-like fractions is significantly correlated with the content extracted with 0.1M HCl. Arsenic and mercury speciation of sediments are quite similar in the Kaoping River estuary, the Chiku Lagoon and Tapong Bay. Both As and Hg are mostly concentrated in the residual fraction, and secondly located in Fe-Mn oxides for As, and in organic matter for Hg. Arsenic and mercury speciation in sediments are apparently not controlled by the variability of salinity in the estuary.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:NSYSU/oai:NSYSU:etd-0726106-152138
Date26 July 2006
CreatorsLu, Chia-chun
ContributorsMeng-Hsien Chen, Chon-Lin Lee, James T. Liu, Jia-jang Hung
PublisherNSYSU
Source SetsNSYSU Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
LanguageCholon
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.lib.nsysu.edu.tw/ETD-db/ETD-search/view_etd?URN=etd-0726106-152138
Rightsoff_campus_withheld, Copyright information available at source archive

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