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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Bioavailability and assessment of heavy metal pollution in sediment cores off the Mejerda River Delta (Gulf of Tunis): How useful is a multiproxy approach ?

Ayed AddedLotfi AleyaWalid OueslatiMohamed Amine HelaliNoureddine Zaaboub

subject

PollutionDeltaGeologic SedimentsTunisia010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesmedia_common.quotation_subjectCarbonateschemistry.chemical_elementEnvironmental pollution010501 environmental sciencesAquatic ScienceOceanographyCoastal areas01 natural sciencesMining[ SDE ] Environmental SciencesRiversMetals Heavy0105 earth and related environmental sciencesmedia_commongeographyCadmiumRiver deltageography.geographical_feature_categoryToxicityTrace elementSedimentGeo-accumulation indexPollutionEnrichment factor6. Clean waterTrace ElementsZincchemistry13. Climate actionEnvironmental chemistry[SDE]Environmental SciencesEnvironmental scienceChemical speciationEnvironmental PollutionEnrichment factorWater Pollutants ChemicalCadmiumEnvironmental Monitoring

description

International audience; Three core samples were taken from zones offshore from the Mejerda River Delta (Tunisia) and analyzed formajor and trace elements to assess their relationships with organic matter, monosulfides and carbonates, aswell as for pollution and bioavailability. Chemical speciation,ΣSEM/AVS, the enrichment factor (EF) and thegeo-accumulation index (I-geo) were used. Iron, cadmium, lead and zinc – the most frequently mined metalsin the Mejerda catchment – were found as contaminants in the offshore areas. Estimations of trace elementaccumulation using the EF and the I-geo index show that lead, and to a lesser extent zinc, are the most pollutingmetals off the Mejerda outlet. According to their bioavailability, these metals are also the most toxic. Only cadmiumis heavily present in delta sediment (EF N 100) though deeply sequestrated (100% bound to the residualfraction) and thus presents no toxicity.

https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01277537