Skip To Content

TitleOil sands development and its impact on atmospheric wet deposition of air pollutants to the Athabasca Oil Sands Region, Alberta, Canada
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsLynam, M. M., Dvonch T. J., Barres J. A., Morishita M., Legge A., & Percy K.
Secondary TitleEnvironmental Pollution
Volume206
Pagination9 pages
Date Published11/2015
Publication Languageeng
ISSN Number02697491
KeywordsAthabasca Oil Sands Region (AOSR), atmospheric wet deposition, crustal elements, fugitive dust, oil sands development, priority pollutants
Abstract

Characterization of air pollutant deposition resulting from Athabasca oil sands development is necessary to assess risk to humans and the environment. To investigate this we collected event-based wet deposition during a pilot study in 2010–2012 at the AMS 6 site 30 km from the nearest upgrading facility in Fort McMurray, AB, Canada. Sulfate, nitrate and ammonium deposition was (kg/ha) 1.96, 1.60 and 1.03, respectively. Trace element pollutant deposition ranged from 2 × 10−5 - 0.79 and exhibited the trend Hg < Se < As < Cd < Pb < Cu < Zn < S. Crustal element deposition ranged from 1.4 × 10−4 – 0.46 and had the trend: La < Ce < Sr < Mn < Al < Fe < Mg. S, Se and Hg demonstrated highest median enrichment factors (130–2020) suggesting emissions from oil sands development, urban activities and forest fires were deposited. High deposition of the elements Sr, Mn, Fe and Mg which are tracers for soil and crustal dust implies land-clearing, mining and hauling emissions greatly impacted surrounding human settlements and ecosystems.

DOI10.1016/j.envpol.2015.07.032
Locational Keywords

Athabasca River

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5918853050

Short TitleEnvironmental Pollution
Citation Key54610

Enter keywords or search terms and press Search

Search this site


Subscribe to the site

Syndicate content

Bookmark and Share