5 research outputs found
Polychlorinated Biphenyls in Glaciers. 1. Deposition History from an Alpine Ice Core
We present a highly time-resolved
historical record of polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs) from an Alpine ice core (Fiescherhorn glacier, Switzerland).
Introduced in the 1940s, PCBs were widely used industrial chemicals.
Because of their persistence they are still found in the environment,
long after their production phase-out. The Fiescherhorn ice core record
covers the entire time period of industrial use of PCBs, that is,
1940–2002. The total concentration of six PCBs varies from
0.5 to 5 ng L<sup>–1</sup> and reveals a temporal trend, with
an 8-fold increase from the early 1940s to the peak value in the 1970s.
The level in 2002 is comparable to the concentration in the 1940s,
when PCBs were introduced into the market. The time trend of PCBs
associated with the particulate fraction closely follows the trend
found in the dissolved fraction, but the absolute values are a factor
of 10 lower. In addition to changing emissions, fluctuations in the
PCB record were explained by variabilty in convective transport and
postdepositional processes such as surface melting. Concentrations
of PCBs are in agreement with data from seasonal snow samples in the
Alps, but are a factor of 100 higher than concentrations measured
in the Arctic. Contrasting time trends and congener patterns between
the Alpine and Arctic region indicate the importance of atmospheric
transport and postdepositional effects