Title of article :
Estuaries as Repositories of Historical Contamination and their Impact on Shelf Seas
Author/Authors :
J. Ridgway، نويسنده , , G. Shimmield، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
Estuaries are sites of port, industrial, urban and recreational development and also important to many forms of animal
life. They often form sinks for sediment and thus for contaminants associated with the sediment which arise from
anthropogenic activities in their hinterland and along their shores. These contaminants can adversely affect estuarine
ecosystems and are the subject of international agreements on environmental protection. For both of these reasons, it is
important to increase our knowledge of the distribution, concentration, controlling influences on, and impacts of,
estuarine contamination. Evidence from around the world shows that although estuaries are sinks for contaminants from
the terrestrial environment, there is significant transport of marine material up-estuary as bed load sediment whilst
fine-grained terrestrial material may be transported seawards in suspension. Major movement of contaminants from
estuaries onto the continental shelf probably occurs only during floods and storms and, in general, the impact on shelf
seas is relatively minor and confined to the coastal zone. The chief exception to this rule is in the Far East where sediment
from major Chinese rivers may be dispersed up to 300 km across the shelf.
Keywords :
contamination , Estuaries , sampling methods , sediment transport , Irish Sea , NorthSea , Baltic Sea , analytical techniques
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science