Login / Signup

Distribution of Anthropogenic 129 I in the Western South China Sea and Its Application for Tracing the Sources and Movement of Pollution.

Mengting ZhangXiaolin HouLuyuan ZhangJixin QiaoRuiqin GaoQi Liu
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
Anthropogenic 129 I has been dispersed all over the world and could be utilized as an oceanographic tracer based on its conservative nature in the ocean. The first datasets of 129 I and 127 I were obtained by analysis of seawater of 36 water columns collected in the western South China Sea during August-September 2018. The measured 129 I concentrations decreased with depth from (0.93-1.61) × 10 7 atoms/L in the upper 200 m to (0.04-0.14) × 10 7 atoms/L at 1500 m, indicating a clear anthropogenic source in the upper layer, mainly originated from the global fallout. The riverine input of the deposited 129 I on the catchment area of the Mekong River is an important source besides the direct deposition in the seas. The water mass with high 129 I from the Mekong River water moves to the east at 11°N by the North Nansha Current in the surface layer (2-25 m). The exponentially decreasing 129 I level with depth indicates that the vertical dispersion of 129 I from the upper to the lower layer was mainly through slow diffusion, and the deep water at more than 1500 m was not significantly contaminated by the upper layer water at least in the past 70 years.
Keyphrases
  • heavy metals
  • south africa
  • drinking water
  • computed tomography
  • optical coherence tomography
  • particulate matter
  • high resolution