Aluminum Leaching Response to Acid Precipitation: Effects on High-Elevation Watersheds in the Northeast
- 20 April 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 204 (4390), 304-306
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.204.4390.304
Abstract
Atmospheric inputs of sulfuric acid and nitric acid to noncalcareous higher-elevation watersheds in the White Mountain and Adirondack regions lead to comparatively high concentrations of dissolved aluminum in surface and ground waters. This phenomenon appears to result from modern increases in soil aluminum leaching. Transport of this aluminum to acidified lakes can lead to fish mortality. Combined results from areas of silicate bedrock in the United States and Europe suggest that aluminum represents an important biogeochemical linkage between terrestrial and aquatic environments exposed to acid precipitation.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Forest Floor Leaching: Contributions from Mineral, Organic, and Carbonic Acids in New Hampshire Subalpine ForestsScience, 1978
- Forest Floor Leaching: Contributions from Mineral, Organic, and Carbonic Acids in New Hampshire Subalpine ForestsScience, 1978
- Carbonic Acid Leaching in a Tropical, Temperate, Subalpine, and Northern Forest SoilArctic and Alpine Research, 1977
- AN EXAMPLE OF SOIL PROCESSES IN THE ABIES AMABILIS ZONE OF CENTRAL CASCADES, WASHINGTONSoil Science, 1977
- Dynamic Structure of Wave-Regenerated Abies Balsamea Forests in the North- Eastern United StatesJournal of Ecology, 1976
- The role of neutral salts in the ion exchange between acid precipitation and soilGeoderma, 1975
- TOXICITY OF HYDROXY ALUMINUM IN RELATION TO pH AND PHOSPHORUSSoil Science, 1972
- Geochemical Mechanics for the Dissolution, Transport, and Deposition of Aluminum in the Zone of WeatheringClays and Clay Minerals, 1972
- Some Folists on Whiteface Mountain, New YorkSoil Science Society of America Journal, 1970
- GeochemistrySoil Science, 1951