Title of article
Contemporary lead concentration and stable lead isotope ratio distribution in forest moss across the Czech Republic
Author/Authors
Ivan and Sucharovل، نويسنده , , Julie and Suchara، نويسنده , , Ivan and Holل، نويسنده , , Marie and Reimann، نويسنده , , Clemens، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
10
From page
51
To page
60
Abstract
Lead concentrations and stable lead isotopes (204Pb, 206Pb, 207Pb, 208Pb) were measured in forest moss samples (Pleurozium schreberi or Scleropodium purum) collected at 273 sites across the Czech Republic during 2010. Continuously decreasing median Pb concentrations in moss were documented over the last two decades: 1995: 11 mg/kg, 2000: 5.66 mg/kg, 2005: 4.94 mg/kg and 2010: 2.85 mg/kg. Several local anomalies have decreased in scale, the overall regional distribution patterns remained, however, the same. The regional Pb isotope ratio distributions show that the ratios show little variation for a large central part of the country and provide the large-scale background isotope ratios for the Czech Republic of about 204Pb/206Pb = 0.0550, 206Pb/207Pb = 1.167, 206Pb/208Pb = 0.478 and 207Pb/208Pb = 0.409 for 2010. This background Pb isotope ratio signal in moss has been locally (900–7500 km2) modified by specific Pb isotopic ratio signals caused by deposition of Pb emissions from known local anthropogenic Pb emission sources, such as industrial combustion of local coal, and a variety of industrial enterprises (metallurgical, engineering and glass works). At some sites where mining of uranium and polymetallic ores took place the moss samples show also a locally specific Pb isotope signal. The in terms of area affected largest deviations in the Pb-isotope ratios, e.g., in the Bohemian Massif, may be due to the input of geogenic dust.
Journal title
Applied Geochemistry
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Applied Geochemistry
Record number
2233623
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