Scientia Marina (Jun 2021)

Natural and anthropic pollution episodes during the Late Holocene evolution of the Tinto River estuary (SW Spain)

  • Marta Arroyo,
  • Francisco Ruiz,
  • María Luz González-Regalado,
  • Joaquín Rodríguez Vidal,
  • Luis Miguel Cáceres,
  • Manuel Olías,
  • Juan Manuel Campos,
  • Lucía Fernández,
  • Manuel Abad,
  • Tatiana Izquierdo,
  • Paula Gómez,
  • Antonio Toscano,
  • Verónica Romero,
  • Gabriel Gómez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.05131.011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 85, no. 2

Abstract

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This paper investigates the paleoenvironmental evolution of a core extracted in the middle sector of the Tinto River estuary, SW Spain, one of the most polluted areas in the world due to mining over thousands of years (>4 kyr BP) and recent industrial discharges. This evolution includes alluvial sands (>6.4 cal kyr BP), bioclastic sands and silts deposited in subtidal and intertidal channels during and after the Holocene transgression maximum (6.4-4.3 cal kyr BP), the sedimentation of clayey-sandy silts in low and high marshes during the last 2.4 kyr BP and a final anthropic filling. Three sharp peaks of pollution have been detected, representing a) a natural origin during the Holocene transgression; b) the impact of the first mining activities (~4.5 cal kyr BP); and c) the effect of industrial discharge and a new period of mining activity throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. Foraminifera, ostracods and molluscs disappeared during these last two peaks.

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