Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden

Acid sulphate soils have been referred to as being among the most harmful soils in the world due to their ability to severely decrease the pH of the water, consequently enabling an increased metal load to recipient water streams, lakes, groundwater reservoirs and estuaries. The presence of acid sulp...

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Main Author: Lindgren, Amanda
Other Authors: University of Gothenburg/Department of Earth Sciences, Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för geovetenskaper
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2077/68009
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spelling ftunivgoeteborg:oai:gupea.ub.gu.se:2077/68009 2023-10-29T02:38:59+01:00 Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden Lindgren, Amanda University of Gothenburg/Department of Earth Sciences Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för geovetenskaper 2021-03-10 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2077/68009 eng eng B 1117 http://hdl.handle.net/2077/68009 acid sulphate soils metal distribution surface water climate physicochemistry Text H2 Student essay 2021 ftunivgoeteborg 2023-10-04T21:22:12Z Acid sulphate soils have been referred to as being among the most harmful soils in the world due to their ability to severely decrease the pH of the water, consequently enabling an increased metal load to recipient water streams, lakes, groundwater reservoirs and estuaries. The presence of acid sulphate soils has triggered several fish kill episodes in northern Scandinavia and the soils are today threatening many of the national environmental goals of Sweden. Their widespread coverage in northern Sweden and western Finland have endorsed these regions to be the focal point for previous investigations. However, in early 2019, acid sulphate soils were discovered in Halland, SW Sweden and this study therefore aimed to investigate the impact from these non-investigated soils on the surface water chemistry of an affected area. This was conducted through in situ surface water sampling from two areas, in order to cover both smaller ditches (area 1) and a larger canal (area 2), located adjacent to a confirmed acid sulphate soil. Sampling was conducted during three separate occasions; autumn, winter and spring with the purpose of investigating differences in discharge depending on season. Water pH and electric conductivity was determined in situ, and the total metal compositions of Al, As, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, V and Zn was analysed with an ICP-MS instrument. Additionally, groundwater data was collected to determine potential impact on the drinking water of the region. The results provide strong indications of leakage from the acid sulphate soils into the surface water, visible through elevated metal concentrations along with pH values between 3.8 and 6.6. Additionally, high electric conductivity values were measured in the water (32-129 mS/m) implying high SO4 2- composition in the water. Higher metal concentrations and lower pH values were measured in area 1 compared to area 2, hence assumed to be more influenced by the adjacent sulphuric soil layer. The metal concentrations in the water decreased from autumn ... Text Northern Sweden University of Gothenburg: GUPEA (Gothenburg University Publications Electronic Archive)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Gothenburg: GUPEA (Gothenburg University Publications Electronic Archive)
op_collection_id ftunivgoeteborg
language English
topic acid sulphate soils
metal distribution
surface water
climate
physicochemistry
spellingShingle acid sulphate soils
metal distribution
surface water
climate
physicochemistry
Lindgren, Amanda
Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden
topic_facet acid sulphate soils
metal distribution
surface water
climate
physicochemistry
description Acid sulphate soils have been referred to as being among the most harmful soils in the world due to their ability to severely decrease the pH of the water, consequently enabling an increased metal load to recipient water streams, lakes, groundwater reservoirs and estuaries. The presence of acid sulphate soils has triggered several fish kill episodes in northern Scandinavia and the soils are today threatening many of the national environmental goals of Sweden. Their widespread coverage in northern Sweden and western Finland have endorsed these regions to be the focal point for previous investigations. However, in early 2019, acid sulphate soils were discovered in Halland, SW Sweden and this study therefore aimed to investigate the impact from these non-investigated soils on the surface water chemistry of an affected area. This was conducted through in situ surface water sampling from two areas, in order to cover both smaller ditches (area 1) and a larger canal (area 2), located adjacent to a confirmed acid sulphate soil. Sampling was conducted during three separate occasions; autumn, winter and spring with the purpose of investigating differences in discharge depending on season. Water pH and electric conductivity was determined in situ, and the total metal compositions of Al, As, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, V and Zn was analysed with an ICP-MS instrument. Additionally, groundwater data was collected to determine potential impact on the drinking water of the region. The results provide strong indications of leakage from the acid sulphate soils into the surface water, visible through elevated metal concentrations along with pH values between 3.8 and 6.6. Additionally, high electric conductivity values were measured in the water (32-129 mS/m) implying high SO4 2- composition in the water. Higher metal concentrations and lower pH values were measured in area 1 compared to area 2, hence assumed to be more influenced by the adjacent sulphuric soil layer. The metal concentrations in the water decreased from autumn ...
author2 University of Gothenburg/Department of Earth Sciences
Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för geovetenskaper
format Text
author Lindgren, Amanda
author_facet Lindgren, Amanda
author_sort Lindgren, Amanda
title Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden
title_short Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden
title_full Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden
title_fullStr Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - A case study from Halland, SW Sweden
title_sort acid sulphate soils and its influence on metal concentrations in adjacent water bodies. - a case study from halland, sw sweden
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/2077/68009
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_relation B
1117
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/68009
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