ISSN:
1573-5117
Keywords:
heavy metals
;
halite
;
coprecipitation
;
Dead Sea
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Abstract After a prolongued period of stratification (about 300 years) the Dead Sea overturned in 1979 and again in 1982. Its waters became saturated with respect to halite and the massive precipitation of halite which occurred in winter 1982/83 has been monitored. We followed the fate of the heavy metals during this period of physical and chemical changes. The concentrations of Zn, Cd, Pb and Cu in the Dead Sea waters have been measured by anodic stripping voltammetry (ASV) which provided sensitive measurement of these elements after a minimal pretreatment of the samples (dilution 1: 1 and acidification). In the meromictic lake (prior to 1979), the concentrations of all four elements were larger in the deep anoxic layers. With the onset of halite precipitation a decline in their concentrations was observed. Most dramatic was the decrease in Cd, which practically disappeared from the water column in 1985. The coprecipitation of heavy metals with halite — collected by sediment traps in 1983 — was examined, as well as that of older halite recovered from a sediment core. Although concentrations of heavy metals were somewhat larger in recent halite, all halite samples had the same coprecipitation pattern: the concentration of Pb was the largest, followed by Cd, and that of Cu was the smallest. The apparent distribution coefficient was larger for Cd than for Pb. We estimated the amount of Cd which may have accompanied the deposition of halite during 1983–1985; it is compatible with its observed disappearance from the water column in 1985. The amounts of Pb and of Zn which are missing from the Dead Sea of 1985 are much larger than can be accounted for by coprecipitation with halite. A possible explanation is that the formation of halite crystals may have enhanced settling of particulates which in turn, may have scavenged Pb and Zn from the Dead Sea waters. Cu seems to be much less affected by the physical and chemical events which occurred in the Dead Sea during 1976–1985.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00026936
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