Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report

The Canadian Mercury Science Assessment is the first comprehensive scientific evaluation and synthesis of mercury (Hg) in the Canadian environment. The assessment is the outcome of a partnership between the Clean Air Regulatory Agenda (CARA) Mercury Science Program, led by Environment Canada, and th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Environment And Climate Change Canada
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: University of Manitoba 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5203/0062250
http://130.179.67.140/dataset/a62f1d36-14e0-4fcc-9c4e-bfd5c9317064
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5203/0062250 2023-05-15T14:52:02+02:00 Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report Environment And Climate Change Canada 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5203/0062250 http://130.179.67.140/dataset/a62f1d36-14e0-4fcc-9c4e-bfd5c9317064 en eng University of Manitoba dataset Dataset 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5203/0062250 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The Canadian Mercury Science Assessment is the first comprehensive scientific evaluation and synthesis of mercury (Hg) in the Canadian environment. The assessment is the outcome of a partnership between the Clean Air Regulatory Agenda (CARA) Mercury Science Program, led by Environment Canada, and the Canadian Arctic Northern Contaminants Program (NCP), led by Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada. The CARA Mercury Science Program was developed in 2007 to establish the scientific knowledge base to support regulatory decision-making for Hg. The intention of the program was to (1) determine key indicators of the effects of atmospheric emissions of Hg on environmental quality and human health; (2) measure current and past levels of these indicators; and (3) develop the capacity to predict changes in these indicators associated with changes in levels of atmospheric emissions of Hg or in the receiving environment (Morrison, 2011). The geographic focus of the CARA Mercury Science Program was south of the Arctic Circle. The NCP was established in 1991 in response to concerns about human exposure to elevated levels of contaminants, such as Hg, in fish and wildlife species that are important to the traditional diets of northern aboriginal people. Since its beginning, this program has supported significant research on the transport, transformation, and fate of Hg in Canadian Arctic ecosystems (NCP, 2012). The geographic focus of the NCP program is north of the Arctic Circle, and the program is complementary to the CARA Mercury Science Program. Monitoring and research in support of these 2 programs provide the foundation of this assessment, a foundation augmented by science supported by other Environment Canada programs, Health Canada, Natural Resources Canada, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, provincial and territorial governments, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, International Polar Year, and industry. Dataset Arctic Human health International Polar Year DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Canada Cara ENVELOPE(161.100,161.100,-82.750,-82.750) Morrison ENVELOPE(-63.533,-63.533,-66.167,-66.167)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description The Canadian Mercury Science Assessment is the first comprehensive scientific evaluation and synthesis of mercury (Hg) in the Canadian environment. The assessment is the outcome of a partnership between the Clean Air Regulatory Agenda (CARA) Mercury Science Program, led by Environment Canada, and the Canadian Arctic Northern Contaminants Program (NCP), led by Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada. The CARA Mercury Science Program was developed in 2007 to establish the scientific knowledge base to support regulatory decision-making for Hg. The intention of the program was to (1) determine key indicators of the effects of atmospheric emissions of Hg on environmental quality and human health; (2) measure current and past levels of these indicators; and (3) develop the capacity to predict changes in these indicators associated with changes in levels of atmospheric emissions of Hg or in the receiving environment (Morrison, 2011). The geographic focus of the CARA Mercury Science Program was south of the Arctic Circle. The NCP was established in 1991 in response to concerns about human exposure to elevated levels of contaminants, such as Hg, in fish and wildlife species that are important to the traditional diets of northern aboriginal people. Since its beginning, this program has supported significant research on the transport, transformation, and fate of Hg in Canadian Arctic ecosystems (NCP, 2012). The geographic focus of the NCP program is north of the Arctic Circle, and the program is complementary to the CARA Mercury Science Program. Monitoring and research in support of these 2 programs provide the foundation of this assessment, a foundation augmented by science supported by other Environment Canada programs, Health Canada, Natural Resources Canada, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, provincial and territorial governments, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, International Polar Year, and industry.
format Dataset
author Environment And Climate Change Canada
spellingShingle Environment And Climate Change Canada
Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report
author_facet Environment And Climate Change Canada
author_sort Environment And Climate Change Canada
title Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report
title_short Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report
title_full Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report
title_fullStr Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report
title_full_unstemmed Canadian Mercury Science Assessment Report
title_sort canadian mercury science assessment report
publisher University of Manitoba
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5203/0062250
http://130.179.67.140/dataset/a62f1d36-14e0-4fcc-9c4e-bfd5c9317064
long_lat ENVELOPE(161.100,161.100,-82.750,-82.750)
ENVELOPE(-63.533,-63.533,-66.167,-66.167)
geographic Arctic
Canada
Cara
Morrison
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Cara
Morrison
genre Arctic
Human health
International Polar Year
genre_facet Arctic
Human health
International Polar Year
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5203/0062250
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