Polychlorinated biphenyls in a temperate Alpine glacier: 1. Effect of percolating meltwater on their distribution in glacier ice

In Alpine regions, glaciers act as environmental archives and can accumulate significant amounts of atmospherically derived pollutants. Due to the current climate-warming-induced accelerated melting, these pollutants are being released at correspondingly higher rates. To examine the effect of meltin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Science & Technology
Main Authors: Pavlova, Pavlina Aneva, Jenk, Theo Manuel, Schmid, Peter, Bogdal, Christian, Steinlin, Christine, Schwikowski, Margit
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Chemical Society 2015
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b03303
Description
Summary:In Alpine regions, glaciers act as environmental archives and can accumulate significant amounts of atmospherically derived pollutants. Due to the current climate-warming-induced accelerated melting, these pollutants are being released at correspondingly higher rates. To examine the effect of melting on the redistribution of legacy pollutants in Alpine glaciers, we analyzed polychlorinated biphenyls in an ice core from the temperate Silvretta glacier, located in eastern Switzerland. This glacier is affected by surface melting in summer. As a result, liquid water percolates down and particles are enriched in the current annual surface layer. Dating the ice core was a challenge because meltwater percolation also affects the traditionally used parameters. Instead, we counted annual layers of particulate black carbon in the ice core, adding the years with negative glacier mass balance, that is, years with melting and subsequent loss of the entire annual snow accumulation. The analyzed samples cover the time period 1930–2011. The concentration of indicator PCBs (iPCBs) in the Silvretta ice core follows the emission history, peaking in the 1970s (2.5 ng/L). High PCB values in the 1990s and 1930s are attributed to meltwater-induced relocation within the glacier. The total iPCB load at the Silvretta ice core site is 5 ng/cm 2 . A significant amount of the total PCB burden in the Silvretta glacier has been released to the environment.