Abstract

Agricultural (Ap, Ap-horizon, 0–20cm) and grazing land soil samples (Gr, 0–10cm) were collected from a large part of Europe (33 countries, 5.6million km2) at an average density of 1sample site/2500km2. The resulting more than 2×2000 soil samples were air dried, sieved to <2mm and analysed for their Hg concentrations following an aqua regia extraction. Median concentrations for Hg are 0.030mg/kg (range: <0.003–1.56mg/kg) for the Ap samples and 0.035mg/kg (range: <0.003–3.12mg/kg) for the Gr samples. Only 5 Ap and 10 Gr samples returned Hg concentrations above 1mg/kg. In the geochemical maps the continental-scale distribution of the element is clearly dominated by geology. Climate exerts an important influence. Mercury accumulates in those areas of northern Europe where a wet and cold climate favours the build-up of soil organic material. Typical anthropogenic sources like coal-fired power plants, waste incinerators, chlor-alkali plants, metal smelters and urban agglomerations are hardly visible at continental scales but can have a major impact at the local-scale.

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