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Dive into the research topics where Anaëlle Simonneau is active.

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Featured researches published by Anaëlle Simonneau.


Science of The Total Environment | 2012

Spatial and temporal trends in PCBs in sediment along the lower Rhône River, France.

Marc Desmet; Brice Mourier; Barbara J. Mahler; Peter C. Van Metre; Gwenaëlle Roux; Henri Persat; Irène Lefèvre; Annie Peretti; Emmanuel Chapron; Anaëlle Simonneau; Cécile Miège; Marc Babut

Despite increasingly strict control of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) releases in France since the mid-1970s, PCB contamination of fish recently has emerged as a major concern in the lower Rhône River basin. We measured PCB concentrations in Rhône sediment to evaluate the effects of PCB releases from major urban and industrial areas, sediment redistribution by large floods, and regulatory controls on PCB trends from 1970 to present. Profiles of PCBs (the sum of seven indicator PCB congeners) were reconstructed from sediment cores collected from an off-river rural reference site and from three depositional areas along the Rhône upstream and downstream from the city of Lyon, France. Core chronology was determined from radionuclide profiles and flood deposits. PCB concentrations increased progressively in the downstream direction, and reached a maximum concentration in 1991 of 281 μg/kg at the most downstream site. At the rural reference site and at the upstream Rhône site, PCB concentrations peaked in the 1970s (maximum concentration of 13 and 78 μg/kg, respectively) and have decreased exponentially since then. PCB concentrations in the middle and downstream cores were elevated into the early 1990s, decreased very rapidly until 2000, and since then have remained relatively stable. Congener profiles for three time windows (1965-80, 1986-93, and 2000-08) were similar in the three sediment cores from the Rhône and different from those at the rural reference site. The results indicate that permitted discharges from a hazardous-waste treatment facility upstream from Lyon might have contributed to high concentrations into the 1980-90s, but that industrial discharges from the greater Lyon area and tributaries to the Rhône near Lyon have had a greater contribution since the 1990s. There is little indication that PCB concentration in sediments downstream from Lyon will decrease over at least the short term.


5th International Symposium on Submarine Mass Movements and Their Consequences | 2012

New Evidence of Holocene Mass Wasting Events in Recent Volcanic Lakes from the French Massif Central (Lakes Pavin, Montcineyre and Chauvet) and Implications for Natural Hazards

Emmanuel Chapron; Grégoire Ledoux; Anaëlle Simonneau; Patrick Albéric; Guillaume St-Onge; Patrick Lajeunesse; Pierre Boivin; Marc Desmet

High-resolution seismic profiling (12 kHz) surveys combined with sediment cores, radiocarbon dating, tephrochronology and multibeam bathymetry (when available) allow documentation of a range of Holocene mass wasting events in nearby contrasting lakes of volcanic origin in the French Massif Central (45°N, 2°E): two deep maar lakes (Pavin and Chauvet) and a shallow lake (Montcineyre) dammed by the growth of a volcano. In these lacustrine environments dominated by authigenic sedimentation, recent slide scars, acoustically transparent to chaotic lens-shaped bodies, slump deposits or reworked regional tephra layers suggest that subaqueous mass wasting processes may have been favoured by gas content in the sediments and lake level changes. While these events may have had a limited impact in both lakes Chauvet and Montcineyre, they apparently favoured the development of lacustrine meromicticity in maar Lake Pavin along with possible subaerial debris flows resulting from crater outburst events.


The Holocene | 2013

Recent climatic and anthropogenic imprints on lacustrine systems in the Pyrenean Mountains inferred from minerogenic and organic clastic supply (Vicdessos valley, Pyrenees, France)

Anaëlle Simonneau; Emmanuel Chapron; Thierry Courp; Kazuyo Tachikawa; Gaël Le Roux; Sandrine Baron; Didier Galop; Marta Garcia; Christian Di-Giovanni; Mikael Motelica-Heino; Florence Mazier; Anthony Foucher; Thomas Houet; Marc Desmet; Edouard Bard

High-resolution seismic profiling has been combined with geochemical analyses of both watershed samples and five lacustrine cores retrieved from two natural lacustrine basins of glacial origin: Lake Majeur and Lake Sigriou (1630 m a.s.l. and 1995 m a.s.l., respectively, Eastern French Pyrenees). Identifying specific minerogenic and organic markers of autochthonous and allochthonous supply, data allow documenting past climatic and anthropogenic pressures. Over the past century, the lacustrine sediment of Lake Majeur has been essentially composed of algae, drastically contrasting with the natural sedimentary infill of the basin, mainly resulting from soil erosion from the mid–late Holocene. Since ad 1907, the Lake Majeur has been used for hydroelectricity production. Human-induced lake-level regulations, affecting up to 37% of the lacustrine surface, have increased by fourfold the accumulation rate of the lake and favoured water enrichment. Rubidium abundance within the lacustrine sediments of the two lakes reflects the mid–late Holocene palaeohydrology. After dam construction in ad 1907, greater quantities of rubidium found in Lake Majeur sedimentary infills indicate drier climatic periods, such as from ad 1975 to ad 1982, during which water reservoirs were particularly in demand. Inversely, before the dam was built, rubidium fluctuations were correlated with wetter conditions and hydrological events were recorded as sandy layers deposited by canyon reactivation, synchronous with European climatic deterioration phases. We notably document that the Mediaeval Climate Anomaly was interrupted by some humid periods dated c. ad 940, ad 1080, ad 1100 and ad 1250. We also date the onset of the ‘Little Ice Age’ c. ad 1360 and identify that this period was wetter after c. ad 1500.


Archive | 2016

French Alpine Foreland Holocene Paleoseismicity Revealed by Coeval Mass Wasting Deposits in Glacial Lakes

Emmanuel Chapron; Anaëlle Simonneau; Grégoire Ledoux; Fabien Arnaud; Patrick Lajeunesse; Patrick Albéric

The French alpine foreland area has been struck by several earthquakes with magnitudes above 5 on Richter scale in recent history. In this paper we document the regional impact of historical and Holocene earthquakes based on the identification of mass wasting deposits in glacial lakes at different settings. Lake Le Bourget and Lake Paladru are situated at low elevations (respectively 231 m–492 m) and Lake Blanc Huez is located at 2500 m altitude. Through the integration of high-resolution acoustic profiles and accurately dated sediment samples from cores, recent coeval mass wasting deposits in each lake were correlated with nearby historical earthquakes, whereas coeval mass wasting deposits around 5200 cal BP and 9550 cal BP in these three lakes were correlated to regional earthquakes events.


Climate of The Past | 2013

North–south palaeohydrological contrasts in the central Mediterranean during the Holocene: tentative synthesis and working hypotheses

Michel Magny; Nathalie Combourieu-Nebout; J.-L. de Beaulieu; Viviane Bout-Roumazeilles; Daniele Colombaroli; Stéphanie Desprat; Alexander Francke; Sébastien Joannin; Elena Ortu; Odile Peyron; Marie Revel; Laura Sadori; Giuseppe Siani; Marie-Alexandrine Sicre; Stéphanie Samartin; Anaëlle Simonneau; Willy Tinner; Boris Vannière; Bernd Wagner; Giovanni Zanchetta; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Elisabetta Brugiapaglia; Emmanuel Chapron; M. Debret; Marc Desmet; Julien Didier; L. Essallami; Didier Galop; Adrian Gilli; Jean Nicolas Haas


Geophysical Research Letters | 2013

A 2000 year long seasonal record of floods in the southern European Alps

Stefanie B. Wirth; Adrian Gilli; Anaëlle Simonneau; Daniel Ariztegui; Boris Vannière; Lukas Glur; Emmanuel Chapron; Michel Magny; Flavio S. Anselmetti


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Holocene land-use evolution and associated soil erosion in the French Prealps inferred from Lake Paladru sediments and archaeological evidences

Anaëlle Simonneau; Elise Doyen; Emmanuel Chapron; Laurent Millet; Boris Vannière; Christian Di-Giovanni; Nicolas Bossard; Kazuyo Tachikawa; Edouard Bard; Patrick Albéric; Marc Desmet; Gwenaëlle Roux; Patrick Lajeunesse; Jean-François Berger; Fabien Arnaud


Climate of The Past | 2013

Mass-movement and flood-induced deposits in Lake Ledro, southern Alps, Italy: implications for Holocene palaeohydrology and natural hazards

Anaëlle Simonneau; Emmanuel Chapron; Boris Vannière; Stefanie B. Wirth; Adrian Gilli; Christian Di-Giovanni; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Marc Desmet; Michel Magny


International Journal of Coal Geology | 2010

Quantitative palynofacies analysis as a new tool to study transfers of fossil organic matter in recent terrestrial environments

Yann Graz; Christian Di-Giovanni; Yoann Copard; Fatima Laggoun-Défarge; Mohammed Boussafir; Elisabeth Lallier-Vergès; Patrick Baillif; Laurent Perdereau; Anaëlle Simonneau


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2014

Tracking Holocene glacial and high-altitude alpine environments fluctuations from minerogenic and organic markers in proglacial lake sediments (Lake Blanc Huez, Western French Alps)

Anaëlle Simonneau; Emmanuel Chapron; Marion Garçon; Thierry Winiarski; Yann Graz; Catherine Chauvel; Maxime Debret; Mickaël Motelica-Heino; Marc Desmet; Christian Di Giovanni

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Marc Desmet

François Rabelais University

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Boris Vannière

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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