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Sources, timing, and fate of sediment and contaminants in the nearshore: insights from geochemistry

March 31, 2019

Rivers in Cascade watersheds carry sediment with a volcanic composition that is distinct from the plutonic composition of the Puget lowlands. Compositional properties (signatures) allow discrimination of river-sourced Cascade from lowland sediment, and inferences about transport pathways. Surface sediment on land contains atmospheric radionuclides whose known decay rates define monthly (7Be) and decadal (210Pb) timescales of sediment inputs from land to nearshore regions. We used geochemical signatures to source river-borne sediment in two urban embayments in Cascade watersheds: Commencement Bay (CB) and Bellingham Bay (BB). We concurrently determined sediment contaminant levels and, in CB, used geochemical aging to distinguish contaminants in recent winter outflow from those that were pre-existing. Methods are described in Takesue et al. (2017). Geochemical signatures showed that Puyallup River (PU)-sourced fine sediment (

Publication Year 2019
Title Sources, timing, and fate of sediment and contaminants in the nearshore: insights from geochemistry
Authors Renee K. Takesue, Kathleen E. Conn, Margaret Dutch
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Abstract or summary
Index ID 70202880
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center
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