Natural background level analysis of heavy metal concentration in Korean coastal sediments

DI Lim, JY Choi, HS Jung, HW Choi… - Ocean and Polar …, 2007 - koreascience.kr
DI Lim, JY Choi, HS Jung, HW Choi, YO Kim
Ocean and Polar Research, 2007koreascience.kr
This paper presents an attempt to determine natural background levels of heavy metals
which could be used for assessing heavy metal contamination. For this study, a large
archive dataset of heavy metal concentration (Cu, Cr, Ni, Pb, Zn) for more than 900 surface
sediment samples from various Korean coastal environments was newly compiled. These
data were normalized for aluminum (grain-size normalizer) concentration to isolate natural
factors from anthropogenic ones. The normalization was based on the hypothesis that heavy …
Abstract
This paper presents an attempt to determine natural background levels of heavy metals which could be used for assessing heavy metal contamination. For this study, a large archive dataset of heavy metal concentration (Cu, Cr, Ni, Pb, Zn) for more than 900 surface sediment samples from various Korean coastal environments was newly compiled. These data were normalized for aluminum (grain-size normalizer) concentration to isolate natural factors from anthropogenic ones. The normalization was based on the hypothesis that heavy metal concentrations vary consistently with the concentration of aluminum, unless these metals are of anthropogenic origin. So, the samples (outliers) suspected of receivingany anthropogenic input were removed from regression to ascertain the" background" relationship between the metals and aluminum. Identification of these outliers was tested using a model of predicted limits at 95%. The process of testing for normality (Kolmogorov-Smirnov Test) and selection of outliers was iterated until a normal distribution was achieved. On the basis of the linear regression analysis of the large archive (please check) dataset, background levels, which are applicable to heavy metal assessment of Korean coastal sediments, were successfully developed for Cu, Cr, Ni, Zn. As an example, we tested the applicability of this baseline level for metal pollution assessment of Masan Bay sediments.
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