Sediments, Metals and Freshwater: Interfaces That Can Impact Riverine Environments
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Water Science and Technology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2023) | Viewed by 6726
Special Issue Editors
Interests: groundwater management; groundwater contamination risk; water–rock interactions; groundwater flow modeling; groundwater–surface water interactions; land degradation and surface water quality; spatial decision support systems in public water supply planning; conjunctive use of water resources; water security
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Interests: flood-detention basins; rainwater harvesting for drought effects attenuation; hydrologic modeling at the catchment scale; water resources management; quality data; integrated monitoring of climate and environmental impacts; sustainability in agri-food and forestry ecosystems
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Sediments and freshwater form a geochemical interface that controls the distribution of metals across the solid and liquid compartments. High concentrations of metals are typically harmful to the aquatic environment and can enter the food chain, endangering animal and human health. The role of fine sediments in the transport and fate of metals in riverine environments is well documented in the scientific literature. The relationship of high metal concentrations in freshwater to point and nonpoint natural and anthropogenic sources is also known, as well as the forms in which metals are present in the river water that determine mobilization capacity and bioavailability. However, there are still topics about transference of metals across sediments and stream water that deserve attention and justify further scientific research. One example is the fate of metals present in debris from sediment disasters. Debris flow can result from riverbed sediment movement, slope failure, dam collapse, landslides, earthquakes or volcanic activity. In some cases, such as in tailings dam failures, debris can contain large quantities of metals that subsequent to the disaster will leach onto the surface and groundwater, threatening these ecosystems.
The purpose of this Special Issue is to discuss cases or methods related with the spatial and temporal distribution of metals in rivers and their catchments, related to natural and anthropogenic sources. The cases related with sediment disasters are particularly welcome. We believe that this Special Issue may help to bring land use planners, water resources managers, and the general public into the conscience that conservation of water resources begins with a reliable land use and implementation of conservation measures, as well as monitoring of hazard risk, and that deviation from this practice inevitably leads water resources to danger and ultimately to collapse as service providers.
Prof. Dr. Fernando António Leal Pacheco
Prof. Dr. Luís Filipe Sanches Fernandes
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- sediments
- metals
- streams
- debris flows
- water pollution
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