Abstract

Three sampling cruises were conducted in the Seine Estuary from 1993 to 1995 in varying hydrological and seasonal conditions. The site included all of the lower part of the river under the influence of tidal dynamics and the dilution plume in the Baie de Seine. Chemical speciation of arsenic showed high seasonal variations, especially in September when AsIII represented around 50% of dissolved arsenic. The inclusion of organoarsenic compounds not accessible to direct analysis by hydride generation required preliminary mineralisation of the samples. The ratio of dissolved to particulate arsenic distribution was controlled mainly by the iron content of particles. Biological activity had an influence on chemical speciation and thus on the partition coefficient ( K D 10 −3=6±1 in September and 12±0.9 in February). The zone of conservative mixing used for Seine River flow calculations was limited to a salinity range of approximately 10–30. Dissolved arsenic concentrations extrapolated to null salinities were lower during the high-water period because of dilution (17.6±1.1 nM), and maximal during the low-water period in summer (35.7±0.9 nM). Mean arsenic export to the English Channel was estimated at 33.2±6 T yr −1 for dissolved arsenic. Observation of an arsenic output greater than the upstream input, as well as a simultaneous increase in dissolved and particulate arsenic concentrations during the mixing of freshwater with seawater, strongly suggested the existence of an important intra-estuarine source of arsenic, either of industrial origin or related to the transport and diagenesis of marine sediments.

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