• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
    • Privacy
    • Terms of use
  • Subscribe
  • Your Membership

Science and Technology News

Dedicated to the wonder of discovery

  • News
  • Features
  • Life
  • Health
  • Research
  • Engineering

Scientists sound alarm about ‘unprecedented mercury accumulation in Pacific Ocean’

May 28, 2021 by Editor

A newly released scientific paper in Nature Publishing’s Scientific Reports Journal has revealed unprecedented amounts of highly toxic mercury are deposited in the deepest trenches of the Pacific Ocean.

The study, a multi-national effort involving scientists from Denmark, Canada, Germany and Japan, reports the first-ever direct measurements of mercury deposition into one of the logistically most challenging environments to sample on Earth, and the deepest at eight to 10 kilometers under the sea.

Lead author Professor Hamed Sanei, Director of the Lithospheric Organic Carbon Laboratory (LOC) at the Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, stated the amount of mercury discovered in this area exceeds any value ever recorded in remote marine sediments, and is even higher than many areas directly contaminated by industrial releases.

“The bad news is that these high mercury levels may be representative of the collective increase in anthropogenic emissions of Hg into our oceans,” he said.

“But the good news is that ocean trenches act as a permanent dump, and so we can expect the mercury that does end up there will be buried for many millions of years. Plate tectonics will carry these sediments deep into the earth’s upper mantle”.

“But even as mercury is being removed from the biosphere, it remains quite alarming how much mercury has ended up in the ocean trenches. This may be an indicator of the overall health of our oceans.”

Co-author Dr Peter Outridge, a research scientist with Natural Resources Canada and lead author of the United Nations’ Global Mercury Assessment, said: “The results of this research help fulfill a key knowledge gap in the mercury cycle, that is the true rate of mercury removal from the global environment into deep-ocean sediments.”

He added, “We have shown that sediments in the ocean trenches are mercury accumulation ‘hotspots’, with mercury accumulation rates many times higher than were previously believed to be present.”

Co-author Ronnie Glud, Professor and Director of the Hadal Centre at the University of Southern Denmark, who was scientific leader of this multi-national expedition to the ocean trenches, said: “This paper calls for extensive additional sampling of the deep-ocean and in particular hadal trenches to support this preliminary work.

“Ultimately this will improve the accuracy of environmental mercury models and the management of global mercury pollution.”

Main image: On board the German research vessel Sonne off the coast of Chile, ready to take samples from 8 kilometers depth in the Atacama Trench system. Credit: Anni Glud, SDU.

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Print
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • WhatsApp

Related Posts

  • Plants play leading role in cycling toxic mercury through the environment
    50
    Plants play leading role in cycling toxic mercury through the environmentResearchers studying mercury gas in the atmosphere with the aim of reducing the pollutant worldwide have determined a vast amount of the toxic element is absorbed by plants, leading it to deposit into soils. Hundreds of tons of mercury each year are emitted into the atmosphere as a gas by…
    Tags: mercury, news, environment
  • Study reveals the workings of nature's own earthquake blocker
    34
    Study reveals the workings of nature's own earthquake blockerA new study finds a naturally occurring "earthquake gate" that decides which earthquakes are allowed to grow into magnitude 8 or greater. Sometimes, the "gate" stops earthquakes in the magnitude 7 range, while ones that pass through the gate grow to magnitude 8 or greater, releasing over 32 times as…
    Tags: news, environment
  • Using microbes to remove microplastics from the environment
    34
    Using microbes to remove microplastics from the environmentToday at the Microbiology Society's Annual Conference, Yang Liu, researcher at Hong Kong Polytechnic University, will discuss a new technique to trap and recover microplastics. The method uses bacterial biofilms, a sticky substance created by micro-organisms, to trap microplastic particles. The biofilm is then processed and dispersed, releasing the microplastic…
    Tags: news, environment
  • Declines in shellfish species on rocky seashores match climate-driven changes
    31
    Declines in shellfish species on rocky seashores match climate-driven changesThe waters of the Gulf of Maine are warming faster than oceans almost anywhere on Earth. And as the level of carbon dioxide rises in the atmosphere, it's absorbed by the oceans, causing pH levels to fall. Ocean acidification makes it difficult for shellfish to thicken their shells – their…
    Tags: ocean, news, environment
  • Self-watering soil could transform farming
    31
    Self-watering soil could transform farmingA new type of soil created by engineers at The University of Texas at Austin can pull water from the air and distribute it to plants, potentially expanding the map of farmable land around the globe to previously inhospitable places and reducing water use in agriculture at a time of…
    Tags: news, environment

Filed Under: Environment, News Tagged With: mercury, ocean, sediments, trenches

Primary Sidebar

Latest news

  • AutoX expands robotaxi operation zone to 1,000 sq km
  • Schaeffler acquires precision gearbox maker Melior Motion 
  • Sunflower Labs provides its security drone system to range of new customers
  • Monarch Tractor showcases ‘world’s first fully electric, driver-optional tractor’
  • Robot performs laparoscopic surgery without guiding hand of a human
  • Amazon owner’s Blue Origin to buy asteroid mining company Honeybee Robotics
  • Sydney scientists achieve ‘99 per cent accuracy’ for quantum computing in silicon
  • Ceremorphic unveils plans to build supercomputer infrastructure on 5 nanometer chips
  • Motion capture is guiding the next generation of extraterrestrial robots
  • Baidu’s autonomous electric carmaker Jidu raises $400 million in Series A financing

Most read

  • StayLinked launches supply chain integration platform ‘Evolve’
    StayLinked launches supply chain integration platform ‘Evolve’
  • Fujitsu to use ‘world’s fastest supercomputer’ for tsunami prediction
    Fujitsu to use ‘world’s fastest supercomputer’ for tsunami prediction
  • Depressed and out of work? Therapy may help you find a job
    Depressed and out of work? Therapy may help you find a job
  • Plant-based diet and bone health: Adequate calcium and vitamin D intakes should be ensured
    Plant-based diet and bone health: Adequate calcium and vitamin D intakes should be ensured
  • No more needles for diagnostic tests?
    No more needles for diagnostic tests?
  • US outlines strategies for promoting American seafood
    US outlines strategies for promoting American seafood
  • Child marriage is ‘legal and persists across Canada’
    Child marriage is ‘legal and persists across Canada’
  • Study: Countering hate on social media
    Study: Countering hate on social media
  • Empathy may be in the eye of the beholder
    Empathy may be in the eye of the beholder
  • Columbia Engineering team builds first hacker-resistant cloud software system
    Columbia Engineering team builds first hacker-resistant cloud software system

Secondary Sidebar

Categories

  • Agriculture
  • Archaeology
  • Astronomy
  • Biology
  • Brain
  • Chemistry
  • Computer games
  • Computing
  • Digital Economy
  • Education
  • Energy
  • Engineering
  • Environment
  • Features
  • Genetics
  • Health
  • History
  • Industry
  • Life
  • Nature
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Physics
  • Research
  • Science
  • Social
  • Space
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Universe

Copyright © 2022 · News Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in