Release of POPs from Alpine glaciers
Mountainous regions such as the Alps represent a “cold
trap” for atmospherically derived persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
emitted in urbanized areas, due to the prevailing cold temperatures in
combination with high precipitation rates. The awareness of the
ubiquity of POPs such as dioxins, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and
chlorinated pesticides in high-altitude regions and their conservation
over long time periods leads to the hypothesis that melting Alpine
glaciers may represent a secondary source of these “legacy pollutants”.
Thus, POPs that were previously deposited to and incorporated into
glaciers can now be released to the environment due to the rapid
melting of glaciers.
Sediments of proglacial lakes, which form
efficient traps of glacially-derived particles, provide ideal
environmental archives of pollutants associated with particles. In
annually layered sediment cores of proglacial Alpine lakes, we
reconstruct time series of POPs, for which environmental contamination
in Switzerland has significantly decreased during the last decades.
Investigated lakes include Lej da la Tscheppa in the Upper Engadine, as
well as Oberaarsee and Steinsee in the Bernese Oberland. As a
high-altitude and non-glacial reference lake, Engstlensee in the
Bernese Oberland is considered. These studies reveal a first peak of
persistent chemicals in the 1960s-1970s, which can be attributed to
their use and emissions at that time. Since the late 1990s input of
pollutants into the glacier-fed lakes has sharply increased again,
confirming the glacier hypothesis.
Currently we study the
processes governing the transport of POPs through Alpine glaciers. We
investigate the deposition on, the incorporation into, the transport
within and the release from Alpine glaciers by a combination of
chemical multimedia models and glacier models. First mass balance
calculations reveal that the release of POPs from melting Alpine
glaciers largely accounts for the observed increase of concentrations
in sediment from proglacial lakes. These model calculations further
support the glacier hypothesis. Moreover, we can track pollutant
trajectories within Alpine glaciers and determine the temporal delay
between initial deposition of pollutants in remote Alpine sites and
their release from glaciers.
Contact Person: Flavio Anselmetti
Collaboration:
This
interdisciplinary project is a close collaboration between different
research teams covering complementary scientific fields. Involved
groups include:
- Safety and Environmental Technology Group at ETH Zurich
(Christian Bogdal, Martin Scheringer, Konrad Hungerbühler) - Laboratory for Analytical Chemistry at Empa
(Peter Schmid, Heinz Vonmont) - Laboratory for Hydraulics, Hydrology and Glaciology at ETH Zurich
(Martin Lüthi, Martin Funk) - Analytical Chemistry research group, PSI
(Margit Schwikowski)
Publications:
Bogdal, C.; Schmid, P.;
Zennegg, M.; Anselmetti, F. S.; Scheringer, M.; Hungerbühler, K., 2009,
Blast from the past: Melting glaciers as a relevant source for
persistent organic pollutants: Environ. Sci. Technol. 43, 8173–8177. (pdf, 6.42MB)
Bogdal,
C.; Schmid, P.; Zennegg, M.; Anselmetti, F. S.; Scheringer, M.;
Hungerbühler, K., 2009, History repeats itself: Persistent organic
pollutants in the glacier-fed Lake Oberaar, Switzerland. Organohalogen
Compounds.
Bogdal, C.; Schmid, P.; Zennegg, M.; Sturm, M.;
Scheringer, M.; Hungerbühler, K., 2009, The haunting legacy: Sediment
record of persistent organic pollutants in the glacier-fed Lake
Tscheppa, Switzerland. Organohalogen Compounds.
Blüthgen N.,
2009, Reconstruction of historical inputs of persistent organic
pollutants (POPs) in remote Alpine lakes in Switzerland. Master Thesis,
University of Zurich.

