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Dive into the research topics where Irène Lefèvre is active.

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Featured researches published by Irène Lefèvre.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2005

Submarine fault scarps in the Sea of Marmara pull-apart (North Anatolian Fault): Implications for seismic hazard in Istanbul

Rolando Armijo; Nicolas Pondard; Bertrand Meyer; Gulsen Ucarkus; Bernard Mercier de Lépinay; Jacques Malavieille; Stéphane Dominguez; Marc‐André Gustcher; Sabine Schmidt; C. Beck; Namik. Cagatay; Ziyadin Cakir; Caner Imren; Kadir Eris; Boris Natalin; Serdar Özalaybey; Leyla Tolun; Irène Lefèvre; Leonardo Seeber; Luca Gasperini; Claude Rangin; Ömer Emre; Kerim Sarikavak

Earthquake scarps associated with recent historical events have been found on the floor of the Sea of Marmara, along the North Anatolian Fault (NAF). The MARMARASCARPS cruise using an unmanned submersible (ROV) provides direct observations to study the fine-scale morphology and geology of those scarps, their distribution, and geometry. The observations are consistent with the diversity of fault mechanisms and the fault segmentation within the north Marmara extensional step-over, between the strike-slip Ganos and Izmit faults. Smaller strike-slip segments and pull-apart basins alternate within the main step-over, commonly combining strike-slip and extension. Rapid sedimentation rates of 1?3 mm/yr appear to compete with normal faulting components of up to 6 mm/yr at the pull-apart margins. In spite of the fast sedimentation rates the submarine scarps are preserved and accumulate relief. Sets of youthful earthquake scarps extend offshore from the Ganos and Izmit faults on land into the Sea of Marmara. Our observations suggest that they correspond to the submarine ruptures of the 1999 Izmit (Mw 7.4) and the 1912 Ganos (Ms 7.4) earthquakes. While the 1999 rupture ends at the immediate eastern entrance of the extensional Cinarcik Basin, the 1912 rupture appears to have crossed the Ganos restraining bend into the Sea of Marmara floor for 60 km with a right-lateral slip of 5 m, ending in the Central Basin step-over. From the Gulf of Saros to Marmara the total 1912 rupture length is probably about 140 km, not 50 km as previously thought. The direct observations of submarine scarps in Marmara are critical to defining barriers that have arrested past earthquakes as well as defining a possible segmentation of the contemporary state of loading. Incorporating the submarine scarp evidence modifies substantially our understanding of the current state of loading along the NAF next to Istanbul. Coulomb stress modeling shows a zone of maximum loading with at least 4?5 m of slip deficit encompassing the strike-slip segment 70 km long between the Cinarcik and Central Basins. That segment alone would be capable of generating a large-magnitude earthquake (Mw 7.2). Other segments in Marmara appear less loaded.


Hydrological Processes | 2013

Tracing sediment sources in a tropical highland catchment of central Mexico by using conventional and alternative fingerprinting methods

Olivier Evrard; Jérôme Poulenard; Julien Némery; Sophie Ayrault; Nicolas Gratiot; Clément Duvert; Christian Prat; Irène Lefèvre; Philippe Bonté; Michel Esteves

Land degradation is intense in tropical regions where it causes for instance a decline in soil fertility and reservoir siltation. Two fingerprinting approaches (i.e. the conventional approach based on radionuclide and geochemical concentrations and the alternative diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy method) were conducted independently to outline the sources delivering sediment to the river network draining into the Cointzio reservoir, in Mexican tropical highlands. This study was conducted between May and October in 2009 in subcatchments representative of the different environments supplying sediment to the river network. Overall, Cointzio catchment is characterized by very altered soils and the dominance of Andisols and Acrisols. Both fingerprinting methods provided very similar results regarding the origin of sediment in Huertitas subcatchment (dominated by Acrisols) where the bulk of sediment was supplied by gullies. In contrast, in La Cortina subcatchment dominated by Andisols, the bulk of sediment was supplied by cropland. Sediment originating from Potrerillos subcatchment characterized by a mix of Acrisols and Andisols was supplied in variable proportions by both gullies and rangeland/cropland. In this latter subcatchment, results provided by both fingerprinting methods were very variable. Our results outline the need to take the organic carbon content of soils into account and the difficulty to use geochemical properties to fingerprint sediment in very altered volcanic catchments. However, combining our fingerprinting results with sediment export data provided a way of prioritizing the implementation of erosion control measures to mitigate sediment supply to the Cointzio reservoir supplying drinking water to Morelia city. Copyright


Science of The Total Environment | 2012

Severe and contrasted polymetallic contamination patterns (1900–2009) in the Loire River sediments (France)

Cécile Grosbois; Michel Meybeck; L. Lestel; Irène Lefèvre; Florentina Moatar

The Loire River basin (117,800 km(2), France) has been exposed to multiple sources of metals during the last 150 years, originating from major mining districts (coal and non-ferrous metals) and their associated industrial activities. Geochemical archives are established here from the analysis of a 4m sediment core in the downstream floodplain and then compared to stream bed sediments from pristine monolithological sub-basins and from bed and bank sediments in impacted tributaries. The contamination is assessed for 55 major and trace elements through their enrichment factors to Al (EF), normalized to the pre-anthropogenic background. Archives from 1900 to 2009 show enrichment (EF<1.3) not only for Ba, Be, Cs, Ga, Rb, REE, Sr, V, and Zr but also for U and Th, despite U mining activities until the 1990s. From 1900 to 1950, the level of contamination is severe for Hg, Au, Ag (10<EF<30), important for Sb and Sn (3<EF<7) and moderate for Cu, Pb and Zn (1.5<EF<3). This state was mostly attributed to coal uses and metal mining. During the period 1950-1980, severe polymetallic contamination is noted for Hg (EF up to 53), Cd (23), Ag (18), Zn (6.2), Cu (6.0), Sn (5.6), Pb(4.8), Sb(4.4) and for new impacted elements as Bi (23.8), As (3.7), Cr (3.4), W (3.1), Mo (2.6), Ni (2.8), Co (1.65) due to mines, smelters, industries and from urban sewers, collected mostly after 1950 (total population of 8.4 million people). The limited dilution by detrital material (Loire sediment load about 1.5 Mt/year) is an additional cause of such severe contamination. After 1950, river eutrophication is well marked by the general increase of endogenic calcite (EF (Ca)=4), diluting all other elements by 20%. From 1980 to 2009, all contaminants, except Au (EF=100), decrease steadily.


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.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Evolution of radioactive dose rates in fresh sediment deposits along coastal rivers draining Fukushima contamination plume

Olivier Evrard; Caroline Chartin; Yuichi Onda; Jeremy Patin; Hugo Lepage; Irène Lefèvre; Sophie Ayrault; Catherine Ottlé; Philippe Bonté

Measurement of radioactive dose rates in fine sediment that has recently deposited on channel bed-sand provides a solution to address the lack of continuous river monitoring in Fukushima Prefecture after Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant (FDNPP) accident. We show that coastal rivers of Eastern Fukushima Prefecture were rapidly supplied with sediment contaminated by radionuclides originating from inland mountain ranges, and that this contaminated material was partly exported by typhoons to the coastal plains as soon as by November 2011. This export was amplified during snowmelt and typhoons in 2012. In 2013, contamination levels measured in sediment found in the upper parts of the catchments were almost systematically lower than the ones measured in nearby soils, whereas their contamination was higher in the coastal plains. We thereby suggest that storage of contaminated sediment in reservoirs and in coastal sections of the river channels now represents the most crucial issue.


Hydrological Processes | 2011

Tracing sediment sources in a tropical highland catchment of central Mexico by using conventional and alternative fingerprinting methodsTracing sediment sources in a tropical

Olivier Evrard; Jérôme Poulenard; Julien Némery; Sophie Ayrault; Nicolas Gratiot; Clément Duvert; Christian Prat; Irène Lefèvre; Philippe Bonté; Michel Esteves

Land degradation is intense in tropical regions where it causes for instance a decline in soil fertility and reservoir siltation. Two fingerprinting approaches (i.e. the conventional approach based on radionuclide and geochemical concentrations and the alternative diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy method) were conducted independently to outline the sources delivering sediment to the river network draining into the Cointzio reservoir, in Mexican tropical highlands. This study was conducted between May and October in 2009 in subcatchments representative of the different environments supplying sediment to the river network. Overall, Cointzio catchment is characterized by very altered soils and the dominance of Andisols and Acrisols. Both fingerprinting methods provided very similar results regarding the origin of sediment in Huertitas subcatchment (dominated by Acrisols) where the bulk of sediment was supplied by gullies. In contrast, in La Cortina subcatchment dominated by Andisols, the bulk of sediment was supplied by cropland. Sediment originating from Potrerillos subcatchment characterized by a mix of Acrisols and Andisols was supplied in variable proportions by both gullies and rangeland/cropland. In this latter subcatchment, results provided by both fingerprinting methods were very variable. Our results outline the need to take the organic carbon content of soils into account and the difficulty to use geochemical properties to fingerprint sediment in very altered volcanic catchments. However, combining our fingerprinting results with sediment export data provided a way of prioritizing the implementation of erosion control measures to mitigate sediment supply to the Cointzio reservoir supplying drinking water to Morelia city. Copyright


Scientific Reports | 2015

Renewed soil erosion and remobilisation of radioactive sediment in Fukushima coastal rivers after the 2013 typhoons

Olivier Evrard; Caroline Chartin; Yuichi Onda; Hugo Lepage; Olivier Cerdan; Irène Lefèvre; Sophie Ayrault

Summer typhoons and spring snowmelt led to the riverine spread of continental Fukushima fallout to the coastal plains of Northeastern Japan and the Pacific Ocean. Four fieldwork campaigns based on measurement of radioactive dose rates in fine riverine sediment that has recently deposited on channel bed-sand were conducted between November 2011 and May 2013 to document the spread of fallout by rivers. After a progressive decrease in the fresh riverine sediment doses rates between 2011 and early spring in 2013, a fifth campaign conducted in November 2013 showed that they started to increase again after the occurrence of violent typhoons. We show that this increase in dose rates was mostly due to remobilization of contaminated material that was temporarily stored in river channels or, more importantly, in dam reservoirs of the region during the typhoons. In addition, supply of particles from freshly eroded soils in autumn 2013 was the most important in areas where decontamination works are under progress. Our results underline the need to monitor the impact of decontamination works and dam releases in the region, as they may provide a continuous source of radioactive contamination to the coastal plains and the Pacific Ocean during the coming years.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2012

Evidence of the radioactive fallout in France due to the Fukushima nuclear accident

Olivier Evrard; Pieter van Beek; David Gateuille; Véronique Pont; Irène Lefèvre; Bruno Lansard; Philippe Bonté

Radioactive fallout due to the Fukushima reactor explosion in Japan was detected in environmental samples collected in France. The presence of (131)I in aerosols (200±6 μBq m(-3)) collected at the Pic du Midi observatory, located at 2877 m altitude in the French Pyrénées, indicated that the Japanese radioactive cloud reached France between 22 and 29 March, i.e. less than two weeks after the initial emissions, as suggested by a (137)Cs/(134)Cs ratio of 1.4. Cesium radioisotopes ((134)Cs and (137)Cs) were not detected in this sample but they were present in the aerosol sample collected the next week, i.e. between 29 March and 05 April (about 10 μBq m(-3)). We also report (131)I activities measured in grass (1.1-11 Bq kg(-1); fresh weight) and soil samples (0.4 Bq kg(-1)) collected in the Seine River basin between 30 March and 10 April. The (134)Cs from the damaged Fukushima power plant was also detected in grass collected in the Seine River basin between 31 March and 10 April (0.2-1.6 Bq kg(-1) fresh weight, with a (137)Cs/(134)Cs ratio close to 1, which is consistent with Fukushima radioactive release). Despite the installation of a network of nested stations to collect suspended matter in the upstream part of the Seine River basin, (131)I was only detected in suspended matter (4.5-60 Bq kg(-1)) collected at the most upstream stations between 30 March and 12 April. Neither (131)I nor (134)Cs has been detected in environmental samples since the end of April 2011, because of the rapid decay of (131)I and the very low activities of (134)Cs (about 400 times lower than after Chernobyl accident).


Marine Chemistry | 2003

Direct barite determination using SEM/EDS-ACC system: implication for constraining barium carriers and barite preservation in marine sediments

E Robin; Christophe Rabouille; G Martinez; Irène Lefèvre; J. L. Reyss; P. van Beek; Catherine Jeandel

Abstract Barite (BaSO 4 ) in marine sediments is considered as a proxy of surface ocean productivity and is widely used for paleo-productivity reconstructions. However, direct barite determination is not achieved by currently used methods, which rely on the measurement of total barium by inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) and instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) and correction from the allogenic Ba contribution. We report here on a technique that directly counts individual barite crystals using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) coupled to an energy dispersive spectrometer (EDS) equipped with an automated particle counting and classification (ACC) system. We show that barite–Ba concentrations can be deduced from the abundance, shape and size distributions of barite crystals with current precision and sensitivity as high as ±5 wt.% (2 σ confidence limit) and 10 ppm, respectively. This technique, coupled with ICP-MS and INAA techniques for total Ba measurements, was applied to sediment samples from the tropical North Atlantic and the Central North Pacific oceans. Results show that: (1) barite and detrital aluminosilicates are the two main carriers of Ba in the investigated sediments; (2) calculated Ba/Al ratios range from 0.005 to 0.008 with an average value around 0.0066, in close agreement with previously reported values; (3) barite might not be the major source for released barium out of sediments and we suggest instead adsorbed barium as a potential source.


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Historical records, sources, and spatial trends of PCBs along the Rhône River (France)

Brice Mourier; Peter C. Van Metre; Barbara J. Mahler; Yves Perrodin; Jean-Philippe Bedell; Irène Lefèvre

Despite bans on PCB use since 1975 (open systems) and 1987 (closed systems), concentrations of PCBs in riverine fish in France continue to exceed regulatory levels. We present historical records of PCB concentrations in sediment cores from eight sites on the Rhône River, from Lake Geneva to the Mediterranean Sea. Maximum PCB concentrations (sum of seven indicator PCBs) increase downstream, from 11.50 μg/kg at the most upstream site to 417.1 μg/kg at the most downstream site. At some sites peak concentrations occur in sediment deposited as recently as the 2000s. Hierarchical clustering (five clusters) identified differences in PCB congener profiles within and between sites. Exponential models fit to decadal time windows indicate that rapid reductions in concentrations during about 1990-2000 have slowed, and that it might be decades before target concentrations in sediment that correspond to regulatory thresholds in fish will be reached at some sites.

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Olivier Evrard

Université Paris-Saclay

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Philippe Bonté

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sophie Ayrault

Université Paris-Saclay

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Sophie Ayrault

Université Paris-Saclay

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Hugo Lepage

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Michel Esteves

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Caroline Chartin

Université catholique de Louvain

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Olivier Cerdan

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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