Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière

The goal of this thesis is to quantify the diagenesis of arsenic (As) in the sediments, using them as environmental archives and identify the key reactions of As. Eight lakes have been visited in June 2018 and May 2019, along an 80 km transect northwest from the gold mine Giant, near Yellowknife in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Leclerc, Émilie
Other Authors: Couture, Raoul-Marie
Format: Thesis
Language:French
Published: Université Laval 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/68417
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author Leclerc, Émilie
author2 Couture, Raoul-Marie
author_facet Leclerc, Émilie
author_sort Leclerc, Émilie
collection Unknown
description The goal of this thesis is to quantify the diagenesis of arsenic (As) in the sediments, using them as environmental archives and identify the key reactions of As. Eight lakes have been visited in June 2018 and May 2019, along an 80 km transect northwest from the gold mine Giant, near Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories, Canada to collect surface water, sediment cores and porewater. These samples have been analyzed to obtain the dissolved and solid concentration of organic carbon, As, iron (Fe), manganese (Mn) and aluminium (Al) and anions (nitrate, sulfate, sulfide and chloride). As concentrations in porewater were interpreted using inverse diagenetic modeling and thermodynamics calculations. The history of the fluxes of solid As deposited at the bottom of the lakes was calculated after correction for the influence of diagenesis. Diffusive fluxes of As at the sediment-water interface in response to contamination from mining activity were calculated for the two years of sampling. The results show that diagenesis is greater in lakes with lower sedimentation rates. After correction, the data indicates that the maximum As fluxes coincide with the period of mine activity. Nonetheless, lakes near the mine are still influenced by large inputs of dissolved As from their watersheds, and show high diffusive fluxes of As to the water column. Thermodynamic calculations of speciation and saturation index suggest that the mobility of Asis related to that of iron oxides and sulfur. Amorphous iron sulfide forms in the sediment and As coprecipitates or adsorbs to this mineral phase. Finally, the timing of the melting of the ice cover, which allows the arrival of oxygen, seems to determine the mobility of As in the spring. In the context of climate change shortening the duration of ice cover, an in-depth study of the effect of ice cover on redox conditions is desirable. L’objectif de ce mémoire est de quantifier la diagenèse de l’arsenic (As) dans les sédiments, d'utiliser ceux-ci comme archive environnementale et ...
format Thesis
genre Arctique*
Northwest Territories
Subarctic
subarctique*
Territoires du Nord-Ouest
Yellowknife
genre_facet Arctique*
Northwest Territories
Subarctic
subarctique*
Territoires du Nord-Ouest
Yellowknife
geographic Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
Canada
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Yellowknife
Canada
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institution Open Polar
language French
op_collection_id fttriple
op_coverage Territoires du Nord-Ouest Giant Mine.
Arctique.
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11794/68417
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/68417
op_rights other
op_source CorpusUL
publishDate 2021
publisher Université Laval
record_format openpolar
spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/68417 2025-01-16T20:53:35+00:00 Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière Mobility of arsenic in sediments of subarctic lakes contaminated by mining Leclerc, Émilie Couture, Raoul-Marie Territoires du Nord-Ouest Giant Mine. Arctique. 2021-01-01 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/68417 fr fre Université Laval http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/68417 other CorpusUL envir geo Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2021 fttriple https://doi.org/20.500.11794/68417 2023-01-22T16:37:39Z The goal of this thesis is to quantify the diagenesis of arsenic (As) in the sediments, using them as environmental archives and identify the key reactions of As. Eight lakes have been visited in June 2018 and May 2019, along an 80 km transect northwest from the gold mine Giant, near Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories, Canada to collect surface water, sediment cores and porewater. These samples have been analyzed to obtain the dissolved and solid concentration of organic carbon, As, iron (Fe), manganese (Mn) and aluminium (Al) and anions (nitrate, sulfate, sulfide and chloride). As concentrations in porewater were interpreted using inverse diagenetic modeling and thermodynamics calculations. The history of the fluxes of solid As deposited at the bottom of the lakes was calculated after correction for the influence of diagenesis. Diffusive fluxes of As at the sediment-water interface in response to contamination from mining activity were calculated for the two years of sampling. The results show that diagenesis is greater in lakes with lower sedimentation rates. After correction, the data indicates that the maximum As fluxes coincide with the period of mine activity. Nonetheless, lakes near the mine are still influenced by large inputs of dissolved As from their watersheds, and show high diffusive fluxes of As to the water column. Thermodynamic calculations of speciation and saturation index suggest that the mobility of Asis related to that of iron oxides and sulfur. Amorphous iron sulfide forms in the sediment and As coprecipitates or adsorbs to this mineral phase. Finally, the timing of the melting of the ice cover, which allows the arrival of oxygen, seems to determine the mobility of As in the spring. In the context of climate change shortening the duration of ice cover, an in-depth study of the effect of ice cover on redox conditions is desirable. L’objectif de ce mémoire est de quantifier la diagenèse de l’arsenic (As) dans les sédiments, d'utiliser ceux-ci comme archive environnementale et ... Thesis Arctique* Northwest Territories Subarctic subarctique* Territoires du Nord-Ouest Yellowknife Unknown Northwest Territories Yellowknife Canada
spellingShingle envir
geo
Leclerc, Émilie
Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière
title Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière
title_full Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière
title_fullStr Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière
title_full_unstemmed Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière
title_short Mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière
title_sort mobilité de l'arsenic dans les sédiments de lacs subarctiques contaminés par l'activité minière
topic envir
geo
topic_facet envir
geo
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/68417