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Increasing rates of atmospheric mercury deposition in midcontinental North America

January 1, 1992

Mercury contamination of remote lakes has been attributed to increasing deposition of atmospheric mercury, yet historic deposition rates and inputs from terrestrial sources are essentially unknown. Sediments of seven headwater lakes in Minnesota and Wisconsin were used to reconstruct regional modern and preindustrial deposition rates of mercury. Whole-basin mercury fluxes, determined from lake-wide arrays of dated cores, indicate that the annual deposition of atmospheric mercury has increased from 3.7 to 12.5 micrograms per square meter since 1850 and that 25 percent of atmospheric mercury deposition to the terrestrial catchment is exported to the lake. The deposition increase is similar among sites, implying regional or global sources for the mercury entering these lakes.

Publication Year 1992
Title Increasing rates of atmospheric mercury deposition in midcontinental North America
DOI 10.1126/science.257.5071.784
Authors Edward B. Swain, Daniel R. Engstrom, Mark E. Brigham, Thomas A. Henning, P.L. Brezonik
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70175406
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Minnesota Water Science Center