4.7 Article

Mercury inputs and redistribution in the Penobscot River and estuary, Maine

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 622, Issue -, Pages 172-183

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.11.334

Keywords

Sediment; Radionuclides; HoltraChem; River; Contaminant

Funding

  1. Maine People's Alliance and Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. Holtrachem-Manufacturing Company, LLC.
  2. Mallinckrodt U.S., LLC

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We examined total mercury (Hg) distributions in sediments from the Penobscot River and estuary, Maine, a site of extensive Hg releases from HoltraChem (1967-2000). Our objectives were to quantify: (1) bottom sediment Hg inventories (upper similar to 1 m; 50-100 y); (2) sediment accumulation rates; and (3) contemporary Hg fluxes to bottom sediments; by sampling the Penobscot River (PBR), Mendall Marsh (MM), the Orland River (OR) and the Penobscot estuary (ES). Hg was rapidly distributed here, and the cumulative total (9.28 metric tons) associated with sediments system-wide was within the range released (6-12 metric tons). Evidence of sediment/Hg remobilization was observed in cores primarily from the PBR, and to a lesser extent the ES, whereas cores from MM, most of the OR, the ES, and half from the PBR exhibited sharp peaks in Hg concentrations at depth, followed by gradual decreases towards the surface. Based on background PBR sediment Hg concentrations (100 ng g(-1)), elevated (300 ng g(-1)), or highly elevated (600 ng g(-1)) Hg concentrations in sediments, and resulting inventories, we assessed impact levels (elevated >= 270, or highly elevated >= 540 mg m(-2)). 71% of PBR stations had elevated, and 29% had highly elevated Hg inventories; 45% of MM stations had elevated, and 27% had highly elevated inventories; 80% of OR stations had elevated inventories only; and 17% of ES stations had elevated inventories only. Most highly elevated stations were located within 8 km of HoltraChem, in MM, in the PBR, and in the OR. Near-surface sediments in the OR, PBR and MM were all highly elevated, while those in the ES were elevated, on average. Mean Hg fluxes to bottom sediments were greatest in the OR (554), followed by the PBR (469), then MM (452), and finally the ES (204 ng cm(-2) y(-1)). (c) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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