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Clear Lake sediments: Anthropogenic changes in physical sedimentology and magnetic response

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Clear Lake sediments: Anthropogenic changes in physical sedimentology and magnetic response
Names Osleger, David A. (creator)
Zierenberg, Robert A. (creator)
Suchanek, Thomas H. (creator)
Stoner, Joseph (creator)
Morgan, Sally (creator)
Adam, David P. (creator)
Date Issued 2008-12 (iso8601)
Note Copyright by the Ecological Society of America.
Abstract We analyzed the sedimentological characteristics and magnetic properties of cores from the three basins of Clear Lake, California, USA, to assess the depositional response to a series of land use changes that occurred in the watershed over the 20th century. Results indicate that distinct and abrupt shifts in particle size, magnetic concentration/mineralogy,
and redox conditions occur concurrently with a variety of ecological and chemical changes in lake bed sediments. This coincidence of events occurred around 1927, a datum determined by an abrupt increase in total mercury (Hg) in Clear Lake cores and the known initiation of open-pit
Hg mining at the Sulphur Bank Mercury Mine, confirmed by ²¹⁰Pb dating. Ages below the 1927 horizon were determined by accelerator mass spectrometry on ¹⁴C of coarse organic debris. Calculated sedimentation rates below the 1927 datum are ~1 mm/yr, whereas rates from 1927 to 2000 are up to an order of magnitude higher, with averages of ~3.5–19 mm/yr.

In both the Oaks and Upper Arms, the post-1927 co-occurrence of abrupt shifts in magnetic signatures with color differences indicative of changing redox conditions is interpreted to reflect a more oxygenated diagenetic regime and rapid burial of sediment below the depth of
sulfate diffusion. Post-1927 in the Oaks Arm, grain size exhibits a gradual coarsening-upward pattern that we attribute to the input of mechanically deposited waste rock related to open-pit mining activities at the mine. In contrast, grain size in the Upper Arm exhibits a gradational fining-upward after 1927 that we interpret as human-induced erosion of fine-grained soils and chemically weathered rocks of the Franciscan Assemblage by heavy earthmoving equipment associated with a road- and home-building boom, exacerbated by stream channel mining and
wetlands destruction. The flux of fine-grained sediment into the Upper Arm increased the nutrient load to the lake, and that in turn catalyzed profuse cyanobacterial blooms through the 20th century. The resulting organic biomass, in combination with the increased inorganic sediment supply, contributed to the abrupt increase in sedimentation rate after 1927.
Genre Article
Topic Clear Lake, California, USA
Identifier Osleger, D. A., Zierenberg, R. A., Suchanek, T. H., Stoner, J. S., Morgan, S., & Adam, D. P. (2008). Clear Lake sediments: Anthropogenic changes in physical sedimentology and magnetic response [Electronic version]. Ecological Applications, 18(8)Supplement, A239-A256. doi:10.1890/06-1469.1

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