cover image: Great Lakes mercury connections

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Great Lakes mercury connections

20 Oct 2011

Mercury pollution is a local, regional, and global environmental problem that adversely affects ecosystems worldwide. As the world's largest freshwater system, the Great Lakes are a unique and extraordinary natural resource providing drinking water, food, recreation, employment, and transportation to more than 35 million people.Mercury has been released into the air and waterways of the Great Lakes region since the early to mid-1800s from human activities such as fossil fuel combustion, waste incineration, metal smelting, chlorine production, mining, and discharges of mercury in wastewater. The widespread loading of mercury into the Great Lakes environment is responsible for mercury-related fish consumption advisories in the eight Great Lakes states and the province of Ontario. Past and present inputs of mercury pollution have created a substantial recovery challenge for the Great Lakes region.
health environment air pollution wetlands greenhouse gas mercury conservation great lakes pollution water natural resources chemicals freshwater environmental pollution ecosystem lake wetland nature human activities environmental science anthropogenic methylmercury mercury (element) human impact on the environment food web largemouth bass mercury in fish litterfall
Pages
44
Published in
United States of America

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