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Search: hsv:(NATURVETENSKAP) hsv:(Geovetenskap och miljövetenskap) hsv:(Multidisciplinär geovetenskap) > (2010-2014)

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  • Kylander, Malin, 1977-, et al. (author)
  • A novel geochemical approach to paleorecords of dust deposition and effective humidity: 8500 years of peat accumulation at Store Mosse (the "Great Bog") , Sweden )
  • 2013
  • In: Quaternary Science Reviews. - : Elsevier BV. - 0277-3791 .- 1873-457X. ; 69, s. 69-82
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Both bog surface wetness and atmospheric dust deposition are intricately linked to changes in the hydrological cycle and pairing these types of records at the same site provides complementary information. Here a peat core from Store Mosse in southern Sweden covering the last 8500 years was used to make a high-resolution paleoclimate reconstruction based on a combination of bog development, colourimetric humification and inorganic geochemistry data. The coupling of Principal Component Analysis with changepoint modelling allowed for precise linking of changes in bog surface wetness and dust deposition records.A long-term trend towards warm (and possibly wet) conditions starts ca 8150 cal yr BP and culminates with the most pronounced conditions from 6900 to 6600 cal yr BP. The most significant arid period at Store Mosse occurred between 6500 and 5600 cal yr BP during which dust deposition was significantly higher. Wetter conditions dominate from 5500 to 4980 cal yr BP as the transition from the Hypsithermal and into the Neoglacial is made. After a shift to drier conditions, humification enters a more stable period that lasts from 4525 until 3200 cal yr BP. It is during this time that the first possible anthropogenic dust signals occur at ca 4200 cal yr BP. From 3200 cal yr BP to present humification generally shows a long-term decline moving towards wetter conditions. The main exceptions are during the transition from the Neoglacial to Roman Warm Period which is registered as a significantly wetter period and two dry periods recorded 2365 to 2155 cal yr BP and 1275–1105 cal yr BP. In general, the observed changes agree well with regional records of effective humidity and temperature. The high temporal resolution of the Store Mosse record reveals that palaeoclimatic change over the last 8500 years in southern Sweden has had a complex and variable structure.
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  • Podgrajsek, Eva, et al. (author)
  • Comparison of floating chamber and eddy covariance measurements of lake greenhouse gas fluxes
  • 2014
  • In: Biogeosciences. - : Copernicus GmbH. - 1726-4170 .- 1726-4189. ; 11, s. 4225-4233
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Fluxes of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) from lakes may have a large impact on the magnitude of the terrestrial carbon sink. Traditionally lake fluxes have been measured using the floating chamber (FC) technique; however, several recent studies use the eddy covariance (EC) method. We present simultaneous flux measurements using both methods at lake Tämnaren in Sweden during field campaigns in 2011 and 2012. Only very few similar studies exist. For CO2 flux, the two methods agree relatively well during some periods, but deviate substantially at other times. The large discrepancies might be caused by heterogeneity of partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2w) in the EC flux footprint. The methods agree better for CH4 fluxes. It is, however, clear that short-term discontinuous FC measurements are likely to miss important high flux events.
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  • Sonesten, Lars (author)
  • Deformiteter hos oligochaeter i Vänern
  • 2014
  • Reports (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Bottenlevande slamrörmaskar, oligochaeter, är känsliga miljöindikatorer i alla typerav vatten. I en retrospektiv studie har deformiteter hos oligochaeter från treolika nordliga Vänervikar jämförts under en period med minskad antropogen belastningmed avseende på näringsämnen och olika metaller. Stora mängder av miljöfarligaämnen finns dock lagrade i de sediment som oligochaeterna lever i.Resultaten från undersökningen visar på att de allra grövsta deformitetsformerna,dvs. groteskt förändrade ventrala borst, med tiden generellt sett har minskat i omfattning.Det finns däremot inga tecken på att lättare deformiteter har minskatnämnvärt annat än lokalt. Utöver de skador som noterades på ventrala borst vidtidigare undersökningar så noterades i denna undersökning även att deformiteterhos både dorsala och ventrala borst har tillkommit hos arten Potamothrix hammoniensisi samtliga tre fjärdar. Deformiteterna spänner mellan lättare och mergrava skador, där de lätta dominerar. Liknande skador hos dorsala borst har endastundantagsvis setts i tidigare material från Vänern.Även om förekomsten av de mest grava deformiteterna har minskat, så visar resultatenpå att de lättare skadorna inte har minskat noterbart under den undersöktaperioden annat än på vissa provplatser. Detta skulle kunna tyda på att oligochaeternafortfarande påverkas av upplagrade miljögifter i sedimenten.
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  • Rösel, D, et al. (author)
  • LA-ICP-MS U–Pb dating of detrital rutile and zircon from the Reynolds Range: A window into the Palaeoproterozoic tectonosedimentary evolution of the North Australian Craton
  • 2014
  • In: Precambrian Research. - : Elsevier BV. - 0301-9268 .- 1872-7433. ; 255:1, s. 381-400
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The Palaeoproterozoic Reynolds Range of the Arunta Region, central Australia, comprises a series of shallow marine clastic sediments (Reynolds Range Group) which overlies deeper water sequences of turbidites (Lander Rock Formation) and minor sandstones (“unnamed sandstone”). U–Pb age data collected from detrital rutile and zircon in these rocks indicates these sequences contain very similar age spectra, although with a notable and important shift to younger ages within the stratigraphically younger Reynolds Range Group. Detrital zircons from the “unnamed sandstone” directly underlying the unconformity with the Reynolds Range Group contain a major age component at ca. 1860 Ma, together with a wide spread of ages between ca. 3.2 and 2.0 Ga and a minor age component of 1830–1805 Ma. Detrital rutile from the same rock yield a unimodal age spectrum with a mean age of ca. 1840 Ma. The detrital zircon age spectrum from the Reynolds Range Group is similar, although the youngest cluster of ages is younger and dates to between 1800 Ma and 1780 Ma. Detrital rutile from these rocks yield a unimodal age spectrum with a mean age of ca. 1790 Ma. Although the observed differences in ages are subtle, we suggest these nevertheless mark a significant change in provenance. We attribute the predominance of 1860–1820 Ma detrital zircon and 1840 Ma detrital rutile within the “unnamed sandstone” and the characteristic ca. 1860 Ma detrital zircon age cluster in previously published provenance studies from the Lander Rock Formation to uplift and erosion of the Halls Creek–Pine Creek Orogen. This orogenic belt marks collision between the North Australian and Kimberley cratons, an event dated to between 1835 Ma and 1810 Ma and which incorporates marginally older rocks dating to 1860 Ma from the foreland of the Kimberley Craton. By contrast we attribute the influx of younger rutile and zircon, together with a distinct facies change observed with the onset of the deposition of the Reynolds Range Group, to a shift in provenance region to the Yapungku Orogen, which marks the collision between the West Australian and North Australian cratons and is dated to ca. 1800–1765 Ma. A change in provenance is additionally consistent with significant differences in rutile trace element composition. The Lander Rock Formation and the Reynolds Range Group are stratigraphically correlated with sedimentary rocks that overly large parts of the North Australian Craton. We suggest this indicates spatially continuous basinal conditions within the North Australian Craton between ca. 1840 Ma and 1780 Ma, although the erosion and drainage systems feeding this basin were strongly influenced by the collision and orogenesis along the northwest and southwest margins of the North Australian Craton.
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  • Smit, Matthijs, et al. (author)
  • Early evolution of the Pamir deep crust from Lu-Hf and U-Pb geochronology and garnet thermometry
  • 2014
  • In: Geology. - 0091-7613 .- 1943-2682. ; 42:12, s. 1047-1050
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Determining early orogenic processes within the Pamir-Tibet orogen represents a critical step toward constructing a comprehensive model on the tectonic evolution of the region. Here we investigate the timing and cause of prograde metamorphism of Cenozoic metamorphic rocks from the Pamir plateau through Lu-Hf geochronology, U-Pb rutile thermochronology, and garnet thermometry. Regional prograde metamorphism and heating to 750–830 °C, as constrained by thermometry, occurred between 37 and 27 Ma. Prograde growth of garnet first occurred in the South Pamir and spread to the Central Pamir during the following 10 m.y. The early metamorphism is attributed to high mantle heat flow following the ca. 45 Ma break-off of the Indian slab south of the Pamir. Our investigation confirms a long-lived thermal history of the Pamir deep crust before the Miocene, and provides a causal link between break-off, enhanced mantle heat flow, and prograde heating of the subduction hanging wall.
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12.
  • Arellano, Santiago, 1981 (author)
  • Studies of Volcanic Plumes with Remote Spectroscopic Sensing Techniques -DOAS and FTIR measurements on volcanoes of the Network for Observation of Volcanic and Atmospheric Change-
  • 2014
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Volcanism is a rich geodynamical process, closely linked to the origin and ongoing evolution of the lithosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere. Humans have benefited from the resources provided by volcanoes but also been threatened by the dangers of volcanic eruptions, which accurate prediction remains elusive. This is partly due to the inherent complexity of volcanic systems and partly because of the difficulty of conducting key observations to characterize them. In particular, since the segregation and escape of magmatic volatiles are essential mechanisms behind volcanic eruptions, monitoring the intensity and composition of the resulting emissions in the atmosphere is essential to characterize the state of volcanic activity; however, their direct measurement is not always feasible.Remote spectroscopic sensing, whereby gas species can be quantified by their spectral signatures in electromagnetic radiation gathered at a prudent distance from the plume, offers the possibility to conduct reliable and sustainable monitoring of volcanic emissions. To expand the remote sensing capabilities of volcanological observatories the Network for Observation of Volcanic and Atmospheric Change (NOVAC) was established in 2005. The central theme of this thesis is the acquisition, analysis and interpretation of measurements of volcanic gas emissions on volcanoes of NOVAC. Measurements of the mass flow rate of SO2 and the molar ratios of SO2 against BrO and HCl were obtained by scanning-Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (DOAS) of scattered solar ultraviolet radiation and by Fourier-Transform Spectroscopy (FTIR) of direct solar infrared radiation. The uncertainty of the measurements is characterized and methods for combining observations from different sensors implemented. Statistical and physical models of degassing are proposed for selected volcanoes of the network. The resulting time-series of emission on 16 volcanoes is one of the more detailed compilations of volcanic degassing in the last decade, particularly from passive emissions which are difficult to detect from satellite platforms. This work aims at advancing our knowledge of volcanic eruptions for a better mitigation of their risks.
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  • Blennow, Kristina, et al. (author)
  • Implementing storm damage in a dynamic vegetation model for regional applications in Sweden
  • 2012
  • In: Ecological Modelling. - : Elsevier BV. - 0304-3800 .- 1872-7026. ; 247, s. 71-82
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Wind is the dominant agent of damage in forests in Western Europe. Traditional wind-damage models calculate a probability for damage or a critical wind speed at which damage occurs. However, in a dynamic vegetation model actual damage to stands and individual trees is needed to get a dynamical progression of the vegetation. We present a prototype for a new approach to modelling forest wind damage at the regional scale, which we incorporate within a dynamic vegetation model. The approach is based on knowledge from both empirical and mechanical models and calculates the damaged fraction of a cohort based on wind load and a sensitivity that depends on the current physical state and history of the cohort in relation to the ecosystem. The modelling concept has been developed, calibrated and evaluated for Swedish conditions but can be applicable to other similar areas with minor modification. Because of the stochastic nature of local wind load and the difficulty of describing the stand-level exposure, the ability to explain observed damage at stand level was low. Regional level variation in damage, which more depends on the wind load, was however explained reasonably well (R-2 = 0.43). We suggest that this is a useful concept for evaluating alternatives of forest management under different climate scenarios in the process of adaptation to future storm-damage risks. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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14.
  • Buckland, Philip I., 1973-, et al. (author)
  • BugsCEP, an entomological database twenty-five years on
  • 2014
  • In: Antenna (Journal of the Royal Entomological Society). - London : Royal Entomological Society of London. - 0140-1890. ; 38:1, s. 21-28
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
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15.
  • Earon, Robert, et al. (author)
  • Groundwater Resources Potential in Hard Rock Terrain : A Multivariate Approach
  • 2014
  • In: Ground Water. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 0017-467X .- 1745-6584.
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Groundwater resources are limited and difficult to predict in crystalline bedrock due to heterogeneity and anisotropy in rock fracture systems. Municipal-level governments often lack the resources for traditional hydrogeological tests when planning for sustainable use of water resources. A new methodology for assessing groundwater resources potential (GRP) based on geological and topographical factors using principal component analysis (PCA) and analysis of variance (ANOVA) was developed and tested. ANOVA results demonstrated statistically significant differences in classed variable groups as well as in classed GRP scores with regard to hydrogeological indicators, such as specific capacity (SC) and transmissivity. Results of PCA were used to govern the weight of the variables used in the prediction maps. GRP scores were able to identify 79% of wells in a verification dataset, which had SC values less than the total dataset median. GRP values showed statistically significant correlations using both parametric (using transformed datasets) and non-parametric methods. The method shows promise for municipal or regional level planning in crystalline terrains with high levels of heterogeneity and anisotropy as a hydrogeologically and statistically based tool to assist in assessing groundwater resources. The methodology is executed in a geographic information systems environment, and uses often readily available data, such as geological maps, feature maps and topography, and thus does not require expensive and time-consuming aquifer tests.
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  • Kirchner, N., et al. (author)
  • Capabilities and limitations of numerical ice sheet models : a discussion for Earth-scientists and modelers
  • 2011
  • In: Quaternary Science Reviews. - : Elsevier. - 0277-3791 .- 1873-457X. ; 30:25-26, s. 3691-3704
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The simulation of dynamically coupled ice sheet, ice stream, and ice shelf-systems poses a challenge to most numerical ice sheet models. Here we review present ice sheet model limitations targeting a broader audience within Earth Sciences, also those with no specific background in numerical modeling, in order to facilitate cross-disciplinary communication between especially paleoglaciologists, marine and terrestrial geologists, and numerical modelers. The ‘zero order’(Shallow Ice Approximation, SIA)-,‘higher order’-, and‘full Stokes’ice sheet models are described conceptually and complemented by an outline of their derivations. We demonstrate that higher order models are required to simulate coupled ice sheetice shelf and ice sheet-ice stream systems, in particular if the results are aimed to complement spatial ice flow reconstructions based on higher resolution geological and geophysical data. The zero order SIA model limitations in capturing ice stream behavior are here illustrated by conceptual simulations of a glaciation on Svalbard. The limitations are obvious from the equations comprising a zero order model. However, under certain circumstances, simulation results may falsely give the impression that ice streams indeed are simulated with a zero order SIA model.
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  • Kreuger, Jenny, et al. (author)
  • Modelling pesticide transport in a shallow groundwater catchment using tritium and helium-3 data
  • 2014
  • In: Applied Geochemistry. - : Elsevier BV. - 0883-2927. ; 50, s. 231-239
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Using tritium and helium-3 data for calibration, a 2-D transport model was set up to explain the occurrence of bentazone, dichlorprop, glyphosate, isoproturon, MCPA and metamitron in a small groundwater catchment in southern Sweden. The model was parameterised with site-specific degradation and sorption data to enable transport simulations. Local climatological data and a 21-year record of agricultural pesticide use within the study area were used as boundary conditions. Model output was evaluated against a 7-year long pesticide monitoring data-series from two monitoring wells within the study area. The model successfully predicts observed breakthrough of bentazone, dichlorprop, isoproturon and MCPA. However, it fails to simulate observed occurrences of glyphosate and metamitron. Glyphosate and metamitron exhibit relatively high sorption potential, and their occurrence is suggested to be the result of non-equilibrium preferential flow paths which the model cannot reproduce due the conceptualisation of the system as homogenous and isotropic. The results indicate a promising methodological approach applicable to groundwater contamination risk assessment, and demonstrate the potential for transport model calibration by means of tritium and helium-3 data. Main constraints of the study relate to the relatively simple system conceptualisation, indicating a need for further consideration of physical and chemical heterogeneity. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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18.
  • Margold, Martin, 1981-, et al. (author)
  • Glacial Lake Vitim, a 3000 km³ outburst flood from Siberia to the Arctic Ocean
  • 2011
  • In: Quaternary Research. - : Cambridge University Press (CUP). - 0033-5894 .- 1096-0287. ; 76:3, s. 393-396
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • A prominent lake formed when glaciers descending from the Kodar Range blocked the River Vitim in central Transbaikalia, Siberia. Glacial Lake Vitim, evidenced by palaeoshorelines and deltas, covered 23,500 km2 and held a volume of ~3000 km3. We infer that a large canyon in the area of the postulated ice dam served as a spillway during an outburst flood that drained through the rivers Vitim and Lena into the Arctic Ocean. The inferred outburst flood, of a magnitude comparable to the largest known floods on Earth, possibly explains a freshwater spike at ~13 cal ka BP inferred from Arctic Ocean sediments.
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19.
  • Sun, Xiaole, 1983-, et al. (author)
  • Climate Dependent Diatom Production is Preserved in Biogenic Si Isotope Signatures
  • 2011
  • In: Biogeosciences. - : Copernicus GmbH. - 1726-4170 .- 1726-4189. ; 8:11, s. 3491-3499
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The aim of this study was to reconstruct diatom production in the subarctic northern tip of the Baltic Sea, Bothnian Bay, based on down-core analysis of Si isotopes in biogenic silica (BSi). Dating of the sediment showed that the samples covered the period 1820 to 2000. The sediment core record can be divided into two periods, an unperturbed period from 1820 to 1950 and a second period affected by human activities (from 1950 to 2000). This has been observed elsewhere in the Baltic Sea. The shift in the sediment core record after 1950 is likely caused by large scale damming of rivers. Diatom production was inferred from the Si isotope composition which ranged between δ30Si −0.18‰ and +0.58‰ in BSi, and assuming fractionation patterns due to the Raleigh distillation, the production was shown to be correlated with air and water temperature, which in turn were correlated with the mixed layer (ML) depth. The sedimentary record showed that the deeper ML depth observed in colder years resulted in less production of diatoms. Pelagic investigations in the 1990's have clearly shown that diatom production in the Baltic Sea is controlled by the ML depth. Especially after cold winters and deep water mixing, diatom production was limited and dissolved silicate (DSi) concentrations were not depleted in the water column after the spring bloom. Our method corroborates these findings and offers a new method to estimate diatom production over much longer periods of time in diatom dominated aquatic systems, i.e. a large part of the world's ocean and coastal seas.
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  • Löfgren, Johan, 1983, et al. (author)
  • Sea level measurements using multi-frequency GPS and GLONASS observations
  • 2014
  • In: Eurasip Journal on Advances in Signal Processing. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1687-6172 .- 1687-6180. ; 2014:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Global Positioning System (GPS) tide gauges have been realized in different configurations, e.g., with one zenith-looking antenna, using the multipath interference pattern for signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) analysis, or with one zenith- and one nadir-looking antenna, analyzing the difference in phase delay, to estimate the sea level height. In this study, for the first time, we use a true Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) tide gauge, installed at the Onsala Space Observatory. This GNSS tide gauge is recording both GPS and Globalnaya Navigatsionnaya Sputnikovaya Sistema (GLONASS) signals and makes it possible to use both the one- and two-antenna analysis approach. Both the SNR analysis and the phase delay analysis were evaluated using dual-frequency GPS and GLONASS signals, i.e., frequencies in the L-band, during a 1-month-long campaign. The GNSS-derived sea level results were compared to independent sea level observations from a co-located pressure tide gauge and show a high correlation for both systems and frequency bands, with correlation coefficients of 0.86 to 0.97. The phase delay results show a better agreement with the tide gauge sea level than the SNR results with root-mean-square differences of 3.5 cm (GPS L1 and L2) and 3.3/3.2 cm (GLONASS L1/L2 bands) compared to 4.0/9.0 cm (GPS L1/L2 ) and 4.7/8.9 cm (GLONASS L1/L2 bands). GPS and GLONASS show similar performance in the comparison, and the results show that for the phase delay analysis, it is possible to use both frequencies, whereas for the SNR analysis, the L2 band should be avoided if other signals are available. Note that standard geodetic receivers using code-based tracking, i.e., tracking the un-encrypted C/A-code on L1 and using the manufacturers’ proprietary tracking method for L2 , were used. Signals with the new C/A-code on L2 , the so-called L2C, were not tracked.Using wind speed as an indicator for sea surface roughness, we find that the SNR analysis performs better in rough sea surface conditions than the phase delay analysis. The SNR analysis is possible even during the highest wind speed observed during this campaign (17.5 m/s), while the phase delay analysis becomes difficult for wind speeds above 6 m/s.
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  • Dehkordi, Seyed Emad, et al. (author)
  • Impact of Groundwater Flow and Energy Load on Multiple Borehole Heat Exchangers
  • 2014
  • In: Ground Water. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 0017-467X .- 1745-6584.
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The effect of array configuration, that is, number, layout, and spacing, on the performance of multiple borehole heat exchangers (BHEs) is generally known under the assumption of fully conductive transport. The effect of groundwater flow on BHE performance is also well established, but most commonly for single BHEs. In multiple-BHE systems the effect of groundwater advection can be more complicated due to the induced thermal interference between the boreholes. To ascertain the influence of groundwater flow and borehole arrangement, this study investigates single- and multi-BHE systems of various configurations. Moreover, the influence of energy load balance is also examined. The results from corresponding cases with and without groundwater flow as well as balanced and unbalanced energy loads are cross-compared. The groundwater flux value, 10−7 m/s, is chosen based on the findings of previous studies on groundwater flow interaction with BHEs and thermal response tests. It is observed that multi-BHE systems with balanced loads are less sensitive to array configuration attributes and groundwater flow, in the long-term. Conversely, multi-BHE systems with unbalanced loads are influenced by borehole array configuration as well as groundwater flow; these effects become more pronounced with time, unlike when the load is balanced. Groundwater flow has more influence on stabilizing loop temperatures, compared to array characteristics. Although borehole thermal energy storage (BTES) systems have a balanced energy load function, preliminary investigation on their efficiency shows a negative impact by groundwater which is due to their dependency on high temperature gradients between the boreholes and surroundings.
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25.
  • Huser, Brian, et al. (author)
  • Lead, zinc, and chromium concentrations in acidic headwater streams in Sweden explained by chemical, climatic, and land-use variations
  • 2012
  • In: Biogeosciences. - : Copernicus GmbH. - 1726-4170 .- 1726-4189. ; 9, s. 4323-4335
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Long-term data series (1996–2009) for eleven acidic headwater streams ( < 10 km 2 ) in Sweden were ana- lyzed to determine factors controlling concentrations of trace metals. In-stream chemical data as well climatic, flow, and deposition chemistry data were used to develop models pre- dicting concentrations of chromium (Cr), lead (Pb), and zinc (Zn). Data were initially analyzed using partial least squares to determine a set of variables that could predict metal con- centrations across all sites. Organic matter (as absorbance) and iron related positively to Pb and Cr, while pH related negatively to Pb and Zn. Other variables such as conduc- tivity, manganese, and temperature were important as well. Multiple linear regression was then used to determine mini- mally adequate prediction models which explained an aver- age of 35 % (Cr), 52 % (Zn), and 72 % (Pb) of metal variation across all sites. While models explained at least 50 % of vari- ation in the majority of sites for Pb (10) and Zn (8), only three sites met this criterion for Cr. Investigation of varia- tion between site models for each metal revealed geographi- cal (altitude), chemical (sulfate), and land-use (silvaculture) influences on predictive power of the models. Residual anal- ysis revealed seasonal differences in the ability of the mod- els to predict metal concentrations as well. Expected future changes in model variables were applied and results showed the potential for long-term increases (Pb) or decreases (Zn) for trace metal concentrations at these sites.
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