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We are poisoning the very depths of our planet (and fish in the SFR)

mercury symbol2 In: We are poisoning the very depths of our planet (and fish in the SFR) | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

mercury symbol2 In: We are poisoning the very depths of our planet (and fish in the SFR) | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Symbol for Mercury. Public Domain from Wikipedia.

Another good reason we must move from fossil fuels to clean, sustainable energy, and the sooner the better.

Are you wondering how this affects the Santa Fe River?  Check below, from the Florida Department of Health.

contaminated fish SR In: We are poisoning the very depths of our planet (and fish in the SFR) | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

This is a huge disappointment to me, as I love the river and most everything about it.  I love seeing the fish as I swim among them with SCUBA, and looking at these beautiful creatures and knowing we have poisoned them is depressing and insults the river.

While we may not have coal  emissions sources on the banks of the river,  these pollutants travel in the atmosphere so the solution is transition to sustainables.

Read the original article here in EchoWatch.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum


OCEANS

An armored sea robin seen during the NOAA Okeanos Explorer Program, 2016 Deepwater Exploration of the Marianas, Leg 1. NOAA Photo Library

Plastic isn’t the only human pollutant infiltrating the deepest corners of the ocean.

Two separate studies presented at the Goldschmidt geochemistry conference this week found mercury in fish and crustaceans living 11,000 meters (approximately 36,000 feet) under the sea in the Mariana Trench.

“This is a surprise,” Dr. Ruoyu Sun, a scientist from Tianjin University in China who led one of the research teams, said in a Goldschmidt Conference press release published by Phys.org.

However, scientists previously thought that this process was mostly taking place in the upper ocean. Then Sun’s team found methylmercury, a toxic form of the metal that easily accumulates in animals, in the ocean’s deepest trench.

“Previous research had concluded that methlymercury was mostly produced in the top few hundred metres of the ocean. This would have limited mercury bioaccumulation by ensuring that fish which forage deeper than this would have had limited opportunity to ingest the methylmercury. With this work, we now believe that isn’t true,” Sun said in the press release.

Sun’s team uncovered their results by sending deep-sea lander vehicles in 2016 and 2017 to the Mariana and Yap trenches — “amongst the most remote and inaccessible locations on Earth,” Sun said in the press release.”

They collected deep-sea animals like amphiopods and snailfish at 7,000 to 11,000 meters (approximately 23,000 to 36,000 feet) and sediments at 5,500 to 9,200 meters (approximately 18,000 to 30,000 feet), according to an abstract. They found mercury in all the animals and could tell it came from the upper ocean because of its “isotopic fingerprint,” or chemical signature. The results showed human mercury emissions are “much more pervasive across deep oceans than was previously thought,” the abstract concluded.

A separate study led by Dr. Joel Blum of the University of Michigan found similar results in the Mariana Trench and in the Kermadec trench near New Zealand.

“The key finding is that mercury released by humans and deposited from the atmosphere to the surface of the oceans is being transported to the most remote and deepest environments in the ocean,” Blum told Newsweek.

While some mercury could have come from natural sources like volcanic eruptions, humans emit almost three times more mercury than nature does through processes like burning fossil fuels or mining metals.

“We know that mercury is introduced into the environment from a variety of natural sources such as volcanic eruptions and forest fires. However, human activities, such as coal and petroleum burning, mining, and manufacturing, are mainly responsible for mercury deposition to marine environments,” University of Hawaii professor Ken Rubin, who was not involved in the research, said in the press release. “We are now learning from these two studies that the effects of this deposition have spread throughout the ocean into the deep sea and the animals that live there, which is yet another indicator of the profound impact of modern human activities on the planet.”

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