6533b856fe1ef96bd12b31f4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

History of bioavailable lead and iron in the Greater North Sea and Iceland during the last millennium – A bivalve sclerochronological reconstruction

Klaus Peter JochumSoraya MaraliHilmar A. HollandBernd R. Schöne

subject

IronIcelandAquatic ScienceHistory 18th CenturyOceanographyHistory 21st CenturyHistory 17th CenturyAnthropogenic pollutionAnimal ShellsPhytoplanktonBiomonitoringAnimalsNorth seaArctica islandicaHistory 15th CenturybiologyLead (sea ice)History 19th CenturyHistory 20th Centurybiology.organism_classificationPollutionHistory MedievalOceanographyLeadHistory 16th CenturyMetalsIron contentEnvironmental scienceNorth SeaEutrophicationWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental Monitoring

description

We present the first annually resolved record of biologically available Pb and Fe in the Greater North Sea and Iceland during 1040-2004 AD based on shells of the long-lived marine bivalve Arctica islandica. The iron content in pre-industrial shells from the North Sea largely remained below the detection limit. Only since 1830, shell Fe levels rose gradually reflecting the combined effect of increased terrestrial runoff of iron-bearing sediments and eutrophication. Although the lead gasoline peak of the 20th century was well recorded by the shells, bivalves that lived during the medieval heyday of metallurgy showed four-fold higher shell Pb levels than modern specimens. Presumably, pre-industrial bivalves were offered larger proportions of resuspended (Pb-enriched) organics, whereas modern specimens receive fresh increased amounts of (Pb-depleted) phytoplankton. As expected, metal loads in the shells from Iceland were much lower. Our study confirms that bivalve shells provide a powerful tool for retrospective environmental biomonitoring.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2014.08.005