posted on 2020-10-30, 17:12authored byChuxian Li, Jeroen E. Sonke, Gaël Le Roux, Natalia Piotrowska, Nathalie Van der Putten, Stephen J. Roberts, Tim Daley, Emma Rice, Roland Gehrels, Maxime Enrico, Dmitri Mauquoy, Thomas P. Roland, François De Vleeschouwer
Remote Northern Hemisphere (NH) and Southern Hemisphere (SH) lake sediment and peat records of mercury (Hg) deposition
have shown a ×3 to ×5 Hg enrichment since pre-industrial
times (<1880 AD), leading to the perception that global atmospheric
Hg enrichment is moderate and uniform across the hemispheres. Anthropogenic
Hg emissions in the NH are, however, approximately 4 times higher
than those in the SH. Here, we reconstruct atmospheric Hg deposition
in four remote SH peatlands and review sediment and peat Hg records
from both hemispheres. We observe a ×4 all-time enrichment in
SH Hg deposition from pre-anthropogenic (<1450 AD) to the late
20th-century periods, which is lower than the large ×16 all-time
enrichment in NH Hg deposition. We attribute this difference to lower
anthropogenic Hg emissions in the SH, and higher natural atmospheric
SH Hg concentrations, supported by ×2 higher natural background
Hg accumulation in SH peat records. We suggest that the higher SH
natural atmospheric Hg deposition reflects the SH land–ocean
distribution, and is driven by important SH marine Hg emissions. Our
findings indicate that atmospheric Hg background levels and anthropogenic
enrichment in both hemispheres are different and should be taken into
account in international Hg assessments and environmental policy.