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1 February 2011 Pre-Colombian Mercury Pollution Associated with the Smelting of Argentiferous Ores in the Bolivian Andes
Colin A. Cooke, Prentiss H. Balcom, Charles Kerfoot, Mark B. Abbott, Alexander P. Wolfe
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Abstract

The development of the mercury (Hg) amalgamation process in the mid-sixteenth century triggered the onset of large-scale Hg mining in both the Old and New Worlds. However, ancient Hg emissions associated with amalgamation and earlier mining efforts remain poorly constrained. Using a geochemical time-series generated from lake sediments near Cerro Rico de Potosí, once the world's largest silver deposit, we demonstrate that pre-Colonial smelting of Andean silver ores generated substantial Hg emissions as early as the twelfth century. Peak sediment Hg concentrations and fluxes are associated with smelting and exceed background values by approximately 20-fold and 22-fold, respectively. The sediment inventory of this early Hg pollution more than doubles that associated with extensive amalgamation following Spanish control of the mine (1574–1900 AD). Global measurements of [Hg] from economic ores sampled world-wide indicate that the phenomenon of Hg enrichment in non-ferrous ores is widespread. The results presented here imply that indigenous smelting constitutes a previously unrecognized source of early Hg pollution, given naturally elevated [Hg] in economic silver deposits.

© Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences 2010
Colin A. Cooke, Prentiss H. Balcom, Charles Kerfoot, Mark B. Abbott, and Alexander P. Wolfe "Pre-Colombian Mercury Pollution Associated with the Smelting of Argentiferous Ores in the Bolivian Andes," AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment 40(1), 18-25, (1 February 2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-010-0086-4
Received: 25 February 2010; Accepted: 22 July 2010; Published: 1 February 2011
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KEYWORDS
Amalgamation
Andes
colonial
mercury
Smelting
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