Joëlle Marion
Geological Survey of Canada
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Featured researches published by Joëlle Marion.
Geochemistry-exploration Environment Analysis | 2006
Martine M. Savard; Christian Bégin; Michel Parent; Joëlle Marion; Anna Smirnoff
For countries where metal resources represent an important economic sector, one of the main challenges of environmental research is to distinguish between natural and anthropogenic accumulations of potentially toxic metals in mining districts. The present work aims to evaluate a new environmental monitoring tool combining dendrochronology with natural (Ca, Ca/Mn, δ13C) and anthropogenic (Cd, Pb, 206Pb/207Pb, 208Pb/206Pb) geochemical tracers in tree rings in such a region. We compare spruce trees sampled at a control site near Hudson Bay, with those sampled near the Horne smelter active since 1928 in Rouyn-Noranda. The first effect of smelter emissions is detected by the tree-ring carbon isotope records. The δ13C values obtained on trees near the smelter show major changes immediately after 1928. This is due to the presence of atmospheric SO2 which generates a rapid response of the foliar system. The Ca/Mn ratios in tree-ring pairs of 1936–1937 and younger suggest a SO2-related soil acidification. The concentrations in Cd and Pb show a major increase starting in 1944 which coincides with a decrease of the 206Pb/207Pb ratios. The smelter activities likely generated this increase and the apparent delay of 14 years may have been generated mainly by the residence time of metals in airborne particulates, the buffering effect of the soils and, to a lesser extent, perhaps by mobility of heavy metals in tree stems. The 206Pb/207Pb and 208Pb/206Pb ratios indicate that the growth rings contain at least three types of Pb: natural, derived from the mineral soil horizons; industrial, from coal burning urban pollution; and mining, typical of the volcanogenic massive sulphides treated at the Horne smelter. This new combination of natural and anthropogenic tracers allows recognition of the succession of atmospheric and pedogeochemical changes related to industrial activities in the Rouyn-Noranda mining area.
Geochemistry-exploration Environment Analysis | 2006
X. Hou; Michel Parent; Martine M. Savard; N. Tassé; Christian Bégin; Joëlle Marion
A total of 75 soil samples were collected from podzolic soils at eight sites in northwestern Quebec in order to compare results in contaminated locations near the Horne Copper smelter in Rouyn-Noranda with those near Hudson Bay, 800 km further north, and a priori devoid of pollution. Lead concentrations and Pb isotopic compositions were determined on soil samples leached by 0.25 M HCl. Lead is enriched in the surface organic horizons at all sites in Rouyn-Noranda. Its concentration decreases abruptly from the surface organic horizons to the underlying mineral horizons. The 206Pb/207Pb ratios are low in surface organic horizons, and they increase sharply in the mineral horizons. Along a NE–SW transect, the highest average Pb concentration (869 ppm) in organic horizons is found at the test site, 9 km from the smelter. The lowest average of 39 ppm Pb in surface organic layers is accompanied by the highest average 206Pb/207Pb ratio (1.15) at site 5, 116 km NE of the Horne smelter. At the test site, the highest Pb concentration of 1414 ppm is also accompanied by the lowest 206Pb/207Pb ratio (0.98), which is close to the isotopic composition of Noranda galena (206Pb/207Pb=0.92). Both Pb concentration and isotopic composition indicate that the Horne smelter is the main source of Pb contamination of soils in the Rouyn-Noranda region. The two soil profiles from near Hudson Bay display much lower Pb concentration and different trends of isotope ratios with depth.
Tellus B | 2012
Annick Doucet; Martine M. Savard; Christian Bégin; Joëlle Marion; Anna Smirnoff; Taha B. M. J. Ouarda
ABSTRACT In this study, we analysed the tree-ring metal concentrations and isotope ratios of five stands located in three contrasted settings to infer the diffuse air pollution history of the northern part of the Windsor–Québec City Corridor in eastern Canada. Tree-ring series show that the Cd and Zn accumulation rates were higher between 1960 and 1986 and that the long-term acidification of the soil (Ca/Al series) was likely induced by NO x and SO x deposition (δ15N and δ13C trends as proxy). The Pb concentrations and 206Pb/207Pb ratios indicate that the dominant source of lead from 1880 to the 1920s was the combustion of north-eastern American coal, which was succeeded by the combustion of leaded gasoline from the 1920s to the end of the 1980s. Our modelling approach allows separating the climatic and anthropogenic effects on the tree-ring δ13C and δ18O responses. Diffuse air pollution caused an enrichment in 13C in all stands and a decrease of the δ18O values only in three of the stands. This study indicates that dendrogeochemistry can show contrasted responses to environmental changes and that the combination of several independent indicators constitutes a powerful tool to reconstruct the air pollution history in the complex context of peri-urban regions.
Developments in environmental science | 2009
Martine M. Savard; Christian Bégin; Joëlle Marion; Jean-Christophe Aznar; Anna Smirnoff
Abstract This chapter constitutes the first assessment of δ 18 O values of stem cellulose as an indicator of stress for trees exposed to pollution, and of δ 13 C combined with δ 18 O values to evaluate the relative impact of changes in climatic conditions and in air quality in a peri-urban region. The results obtained near Montreal (Canada) indicate that δ 13 C and δ 18 O characteristics in pine ( Pinus spp.) trees record changes in air quality, whereas δ 13 C patterns clearly change in beech ( Fagus spp.) trees under stressed conditions. Therefore, dendro-isotopic analyses offer a potential method for detecting past changes in air quality and evaluating forest responses to pollution.
Journal of Environmental Quality | 2004
Martine M. Savard; Christian Bégin; Michel Parent; Anna Smirnoff; Joëlle Marion
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2005
Martine M. Savard; Christian Bégin; Anna Smirnoff; Joëlle Marion; Zachary D. Sharp; Michel Parent
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2012
Martine M. Savard; Christian Bégin; Joëlle Marion; Dominique Arseneault; Yves Bégin
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2015
Christian Bégin; Mathieu Gingras; Martine M. Savard; Joëlle Marion; Antoine Nicault; Yves Bégin
Climate of The Past | 2015
M. Naulier; Martine M. Savard; Christian Bégin; Fabio Gennaretti; Dominique Arseneault; Joëlle Marion; Antoine Nicault; Yves Bégin
Water Air and Soil Pollution | 2007
J.-C. Aznar; M. Richer-Laflèche; Christian Bégin; Joëlle Marion