Title of article :
Fluvial-controlled metal and As mobilisation, dispersal and
storage in the Río Guadiamar, SW Spain and its implications
for long-term contaminant fluxes to the Doñana wetlands
Author/Authors :
J.N. Turnera، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , P.A. Brewerb، نويسنده , , M.G. Macklinb، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Flood-related contaminant (As, Cd, Cu, Pb, Zn) remobilisation, dispersal and storage in the
Río Guadiamar was investigated following the 1998 Aznalcóllar tailings dam failure, along
with records of floodplain contaminant loading in the decades preceding the tailings
release. A series of post-spill floods resulted in the transfer of vast quantities of sedimentborne
heavy metals and As towards the lower reaches of the Guadiamar and the borders of
the Doñana National Park, but over-bank flood deposits collected between May 1999 and
March 2002 show a systematic fall in contaminant concentrations following successive
flood events. Geochemical improvements can largely be attributed to sediment mixing of
contaminated and ‘clean’ material derived from calcareous catchment soils. Longer-term
contaminant patterns in floodplain sediment cores show higher heavy metal and As loading
rates operating before the opening of the Aznalcóllar pit in 1979 and in some instances predating
1954. The remobilization and dispersal of historically contaminated alluvium in the
upper Guadiamar means that the post-clean-up contaminant signature in floodtransported
sediments largely reflects chronic, long-term metal mining in the Guadiamar
catchment, rather than the acute effects of the Aznalcóllar spill. Generally results present a
cautiously optimistic prognosis for the sensitive wetlands of Doñana, but high dissolved
(aqueous) heavy metal (especially Cu and Zn) concentrations in the upper Guadiamar
emphasise the need for addressing contaminant ‘hotspots’ in the region and for
maintaining flow requirements for aquatic ecosystems. This study illustrates the
importance of establishing antecedent geomorphological–geochemical conditions in a
spill-impacted river system, both for assessing the impacts of a single catastrophic pollution
event and for developing appropriate strategies for remediation.
Keywords :
Aznalc?llarContaminantsDam failureFloodsMetal miningSediments
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment