Abstract

The concentrations of six heavy metals (Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Zn, and As) in offshore surface sediments of western Pearl River Estuary were analyzed to investigate their sources and spatial variations using factorial kriging analysis. Three-scale spatial variations in heavy metal concentrations were identified and separated: nugget, local, and regional scale, which indicated sample errors, anthropogenic pollution and natural variation, respectively. Anthropogenic heavy metals varied sharply and heterogeneous at range of 60 km. Maoming Port, Hailing Bay and coastal area northeastern Hainan Island were potential polluted areas of Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Zn and As, also the Nandu River, Baoling River and Wanquan River estuaries were potential polluted areas of As. These polluted areas ranged up to 60 km in size and tended to extend with currents. The natural heavy metals varied continuously and relatively homogeneous at range of 180 km, which was dominated by riverine input and paleo-sea-level changes.

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