Environ Sci Process Impacts
March 2013
Dissolved oxygen (DO) is a fundamental parameter of coastal water quality, as it is necessary to aquatic biota, and it provides an indication of organic matter decomposition in waters and their degree of eutrophication. We present here a 7 year time series of DO concentration and ancillary parameters (river discharge, water level, turbidity, temperature, and salinity) from the MAGEST high-frequency monitoring network, at four automated stations in the central and fluvial regions of the macrotidal Gironde Estuary, one of the largest European estuaries. The spatio-temporal variability of DO at different time scales was first related to the migration and position of the maximum turbidity zone in this extremely turbid estuary.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDissolved uranium ((238)U(D)) was measured within the Gironde fluvial-estuarine system (France), which is well known for its heavy metal pollution and its subsequent environmental effects. Dissolved (238)U activities exhibit the highest levels and variability in the small watersheds of the Isle and Riou-Mort rivers, ascribed to low discharges and the occurrence of peculiar features (local U ore deposits; Permian layers). The major tributaries of the Gironde Estuary: Garonne, Lot and Dordogne, show rather stable (238)U(D), higher than the global mean riverine uranium activity.
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