Pj. Somerfield et al., BENTHIC COMMUNITY STRUCTURE IN RELATION TO AN INSTANTANEOUS DISCHARGEOF WASTE-WATER FROM A TIN MINE, Marine pollution bulletin, 28(6), 1994, pp. 363-369
Southwest Cornwall, UK, has a long history of metal mining which has r
esulted in the establishment, over historical time, of a marked gradie
nt in heavy metal concentrations in the sediments of creeks in the Fal
Estuary system. In 1991 Wheal Jane, the last tin mine in the Carnon V
alley, closed and the mine workings and Tailings Dam filled with acidi
c metalliferous water. A plug in the Nangiles adit gave way in January
1992, causing a massive discharge of this water, via the Carnon river
, into Restronguet Creek and Carrick Roads. At that time the event was
widely reported in national news media as a major catastrophe. Sedime
nt samples for analyses of sediment metal concentrations and associate
d infaunal communities were collected in November 1991, in anticipatio
n of this event, and again in March, 2 months after the overflow. Anal
yses of the heavy metals data showed that there was no significant dif
ference in sediment concentrations between these dates. Small changes
were found in the meio- and macrobenthic communities but these could b
e attributed to natural fluctuations in populations over the interveni
ng winter period. We conclude that the overflow had no significant eff
ect on the benthic infauna in the estuary.