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Jarkko Akkanen at the University of Joensuu.

Contaminated aquatic sediments can be remediated on site using new methods

The bottom sediment of water bodies is an archive of all human activity. It is a reservoir of nutrients but also of harmful substances – and it can also turn into a source of emissions.

  • Text Marianne Mustonen
  • Photos Niko Jouhkimainen and Jarkko Akkanen

“Most lakes tend to be remediated due to eutrophication. Water bodies have also been remediated due to the presence of harmful substances, but clearly less frequently,” says Research Director Jarkko Akkanen from the Department of Environmental and Biological Sciences.

A lake’s environmental history can be studied through its sediment. For example, the caesium fallout from the Chernobyl nuclear accident shows whether a particular sediment layer was formed at or after the time of the accident.

Sediment acts as a reservoir for harmful substances, but it can also become a source of emissions, even after the original source of contamination no longer exists. Harmful substances stored in the sediment may have an adverse effect on the water body and its biota.

“Substances released from the sediment can be harmful to benthic organisms. These substances may also accumulate in the food chain and end up on our own plates. The consumption of fish from such areas may need to be restricted,” Akkanen notes.

“In Finland, environmental matters are generally well taken care of. If an area is known to have had industrial activity, it is possible to assess where emissions from that activity may have spread. But the question is: do we know all our emission sources? As the climate changes, water currents may shift and sediments may begin to move.”

Threshold values for harmful substances, similar to those available for contaminated soil, are still lacking for sediment both in Finland and at EU level. Contaminated areas are remediated as needed, for example when former industrial sites are converted for residential use.

However, contaminated sediment cannot simply be excavated and deposited on land. If harmful substance thresholds are exceeded, the sediment can no longer be returned to the water body. When depositing sediment on land, risks must be minimised: the harmful substances found in the sediment are effectively encapsulated within a mound.

Samples in nature.
Measuring devices by a lake. Photo: Jarkko Akkanen.

The area of the mine that operated in the 1950s and 1960s has been remediated, but uranium concentrations in the downstream ponds remain among the highest in the world.

Jarkko Akkanen

Research Director

Tutkimusvälineitä. Kuva Jarkko Akkanen.
Samples can also be taken in the winter. Photo: Jarkko Akkanen.
Tutkimusvälineitä.
Activated charcoal pellets. Photo: Jarkko Akkanen.
Experiments in the lab.
Samples are analysed in a laboratory. Photo: Jarkko Akkanen.

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