Jg. Farmer et al., A COMPARISON OF THE HISTORICAL LEAD POLLUTION RECORDS IN PEAT AND FRESH-WATER LAKE-SEDIMENTS FROM CENTRAL SCOTLAND, Water, air and soil pollution, 100(3-4), 1997, pp. 253-270
The concentrations, inventories, fluxes and isotopic composition of Pb
in four Pb-210-dated cores from the raised Flanders Moss peat bog are
compared with corresponding data for two sediment cores from Loch Lom
ond, also in central Scotland. Although the inventories and fluxes of
Pb revealed by the peat record for the past few hundred years are gene
rally lower, the isotopic records are in good agreement, confirming a
prevailing Pb-206/Pb-207 ratio of 1.17 for anthropogenic (''industrial
'') Pb in the atmosphere prior to the introduction of leaded petrol in
the 1920s. The Pb-206-depleted nature of the latter has resulted in a
decline of about -0.04 to -0.05 in the Pb-206/Pb-207 ratio of deposit
ed Pb for both peat and lake sediments. Despite the time-resolution li
mitations of the peat record, car exhaust emissions of Pb appear to ha
ve contributed 35-50% over the past 20 years, 15-30% over the past 75
years, but no more than 27% overall to the peat Pb burden. The finding
that 67-85% of anthropogenic Pb in the peat was apparently deposited
post-1900 compared with 51% for the Loch Lomond sediments could be due
to geographical variations in atmospheric deposition of Pb, other add
itional inputs to the sediments, or perhaps to some post-depositional
loss of Pb from peat, although the integrity of the Pb-206/Pb-207 reco
rd does argue against any significant vertical mobility of Pb in peat.