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Monitoring Inter-Annual Variability Reveals Sources of Mercury Contamination in Clear Lake, California
Authors:Thomas H. Suchanek  Peter J. Richerson  John R. Flanders  Douglas C. Nelson  Lauri H. Mullen  Linnie L. Brister  Jesse C. Becker
Affiliation:(1) Dept. of Wildlife, Fish &Conservation Biology, Univ. of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA;(2) Dept. of Environmental Science &Policy, Univ. of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA;(3) U.C. Davis — Clear Lake Environmental Research Center, 200 Park Street, Lakeport, CA 95453, USA;(4) Dept. of Wildlife, Fish &Conservation Biology, Univ. of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA;(5) Section of Microbiology, Division of Biological Sciences, Univ. of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA;(6) 1661 SW Golf Course Rd., Cornelius, OR 97113, USA;(7) Geo-Marine, Inc., 550 East 15th St., Plano, TX 75074, USA;(8) P.O. Box 259, Bailey, TX 75413, USA
Abstract:
Mercury (Hg) in the aquatic ecosystem of Clear Lake has been documented since the 1970s when fishes were found to have elevated levels of toxic methyl mercury (meHg). Mining practices at the Sulphur Bank Mercury Mine (active intermittently from 1872–1957) along the shoreline of Clear Lake included the bulldozing of waste rock and overburden ore into the shallow nearshore regions of the lake and the creation of steeply sloped piles of waste rock at the water's edge. This process, plus erosion of the waste rock piles, resulted in the accumulation of an estimated 100 metric tons of Hg in Clear Lake. A monitoring program to assess Hg in Clear Lake was established in 1992, and conducted continuously from 1994. Drought conditions in California had persisted for ca. 6 yrs prior to 1992, when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) remediated the steeply sloped eroding waste rock piles, which appeared to reduce sediment Hg concentrations significantly. In April 1995, a white flocculent material was observed in Clear Lake adjacent to the mine and has been observed every year since, leading to the discovery of ongoing acid mine drainage (AMD), low pH fluids high in Hg and extremely high in sulfate. AMD is now believed to be the most likely cause of elevated meHg in Clear Lake. The discovery of this source of meHg production in Clear Lake, which will significantly influence remedial options, was only made possible by implementation of a diligent monitoring program.
Keywords:mercury  mining  monitoring  aquatic  acid mine drainage  floc  Clear Lake  remediation
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