Title of article
The Ribble/Wyre observatory: Major, minor and trace elements in rivers draining from rural headwaters to the heartlands of the NW England historic industrial base Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Colin Neal، نويسنده , , Phil Rowland، نويسنده , , Paul Scholefield، نويسنده , , Colin Vincent، نويسنده , , Clive Woods، نويسنده , , Darren Sleep، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
14
From page
1516
To page
1529
Abstract
Information on a new observatory study of the water quality of two major river basins in northwestern England (the Ribble and Wyre) is presented. It covers upland, intermediate and lowland environments of contrasting pollution history with sufficient detail to examine transitional gradients. The upland rivers drain acidic soils subjected to long-term acidic deposition. Nonetheless, the acidic runoff from the soils is largely neutralised by high alkalinity groundwaters, although the rivers retain, perhaps as colloids, elements such as Al and Fe that are mobilised under acid conditions. The lowland rivers are contaminated and have variable water quality due to variable urban/industrial point and diffuse inputs reflecting local and regional differences in historic and contemporary sources. For most determinands, pollutant concentrations are not a major cause for concern although phosphate levels remain high. Set against earlier studies for other regions, there may be a general decline in pollutant levels and this is most clearly observed for boron where effluent inputs have declined significantly due to reductions in household products that are flushed down the drain. High concentrations of sodium and chloride occurred briefly after a severe cold spell due to flushing of road salts.
Keywords
Nutrients , Ribble , Wyre , River , Pollution , Trace elements
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
987355
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