Abstract

The concentration of main organic and inorganic pollutants (heavy metals, polyaromatic hydrocarbons, radionuclides) in surface waters and in water-soil solutions was analysed on three keysites within the permafrost zone: Tazovsky Peninsula (North-West Siberia), Kolyma Lowland (North Yakutia) and adjacent to Yakutsk (Central Yakutia). In the majority of sampling points that are not directly impacted by human activity, the pollutants accumulate in the uppermost organogenic and organo-mineral horizons of natural soils. At the human-affected keysites the major pollutants may accumulate not only in the superficial horizons of the disturbed soils due to the surface runoff but also in the central parts of the profile, in the material buried by cryogenic, solifluction or fluvial processes and in some cases – in the suprapermafrost horizons and in the upper layer of permafrost transported via suprapermafrost water runoff.

Highlights

  • Nowadays Russia experiences the new wave of increasing exploration in the Arctic: oil and gas production, coal mining, building and reconservation of military objects, Arctic Ocean sea-pass development, etc

  • The supertoxicants can be accumulated in polar ecosystems: heavy metals, polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), radionuclides etc

  • The surface waters that partly supply the moisture regime of the soil profiles were analyzed for the oil hydrocarbon content and the study have shown the relatively low level of surface waters contamination (0.05-0.09 ml/l except for one sample that contained 0.96 ml/l of oil hydrocarbons)

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Summary

Introduction

Nowadays Russia experiences the new wave of increasing exploration in the Arctic: oil and gas production, coal mining, building and reconservation of military objects, Arctic Ocean sea-pass development, etc. Geochemical evolution of these contaminants in polar ecosystems under global climate change and local impacts is poorly studied. Arctic region have already become the depo of global pollutants from other regions of the planet

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