Understanding the geochemical composition of alluvial sediments in a complex environmental system: A case study of the Mura/Mur river

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Understanding the geochemical composition of alluvial sediments in a complex environmental system: A case study of the Mura/Mur river. / Ceplak, Barbara; Moser, Ulrike; Irrgeher, Johanna et al.
In: Catena, Vol. 249.2025, No. February, 108605, 05.12.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Vancouver

Ceplak B, Moser U, Irrgeher J, Sala M, Kralj P, Zibret G. Understanding the geochemical composition of alluvial sediments in a complex environmental system: A case study of the Mura/Mur river. Catena. 2024 Dec 5;249.2025(February):108605. doi: 10.1016/j.catena.2024.108605

Bibtex - Download

@article{5214c378de214d718b7a53f62317f1f8,
title = "Understanding the geochemical composition of alluvial sediments in a complex environmental system: A case study of the Mura/Mur river",
abstract = "The study provides a comprehensive investigation of the geochemical properties of stream and alluvial sediments in an area characterised by a complex natural (geochemical) and anthropogenic environment of the transboundary Mura River (Austria, Slovenia, EU). A total of 65 sediment samples from active river channel and tributaries, and 59 samples from 6 floodplain sediment profiles were collected and analysed. ICP–MS analysis was used to determine the levels of 59 elements in two fractions (<0.063 and 0.063–0.125 mm). Natural (geological) and anthropogenic factors influencing the elemental composition were determined. The sediments showed a low degree of weathering in the upper part of the river and a moderate degree in the middle and lower parts. They are enriched with As, Co, Cr, Cu, Mo, Ni, and Sb compared to the median values for the European stream and floodplain sediments. This can be a consequence of the presence of natural ore mineralisation in Upper Styria along with related lithological features. Factor analysis revealed four natural geochemical associations (K–Ba–Rb–Ga–Li–Tl–Cs–Be–Al–Cu–V; Th–YREE–U; Zr–Hf–Nb; Na–Sr), one anthropogenic association (Cd–In–Zn–Pb) and two combined (geogenic and anthropogenic) associations (Ni–Cr–Mg–Co–V and Fe–Sc–Ti–Nb). Particle analysis by SEM/EDS was used to identify characteristic carriers of specific elements and potentially to determine their sources.",
keywords = "Factor analysis, River sediments, Particle analysis, Particle characterization",
author = "Barbara Ceplak and Ulrike Moser and Johanna Irrgeher and Martin Sala and Polona Kralj and Gorazd Zibret",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1016/j.catena.2024.108605",
language = "English",
volume = "249.2025",
journal = "Catena",
issn = "0341-8162",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",
number = "February",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding the geochemical composition of alluvial sediments in a complex environmental system

T2 - A case study of the Mura/Mur river

AU - Ceplak, Barbara

AU - Moser, Ulrike

AU - Irrgeher, Johanna

AU - Sala, Martin

AU - Kralj, Polona

AU - Zibret, Gorazd

PY - 2024/12/5

Y1 - 2024/12/5

N2 - The study provides a comprehensive investigation of the geochemical properties of stream and alluvial sediments in an area characterised by a complex natural (geochemical) and anthropogenic environment of the transboundary Mura River (Austria, Slovenia, EU). A total of 65 sediment samples from active river channel and tributaries, and 59 samples from 6 floodplain sediment profiles were collected and analysed. ICP–MS analysis was used to determine the levels of 59 elements in two fractions (<0.063 and 0.063–0.125 mm). Natural (geological) and anthropogenic factors influencing the elemental composition were determined. The sediments showed a low degree of weathering in the upper part of the river and a moderate degree in the middle and lower parts. They are enriched with As, Co, Cr, Cu, Mo, Ni, and Sb compared to the median values for the European stream and floodplain sediments. This can be a consequence of the presence of natural ore mineralisation in Upper Styria along with related lithological features. Factor analysis revealed four natural geochemical associations (K–Ba–Rb–Ga–Li–Tl–Cs–Be–Al–Cu–V; Th–YREE–U; Zr–Hf–Nb; Na–Sr), one anthropogenic association (Cd–In–Zn–Pb) and two combined (geogenic and anthropogenic) associations (Ni–Cr–Mg–Co–V and Fe–Sc–Ti–Nb). Particle analysis by SEM/EDS was used to identify characteristic carriers of specific elements and potentially to determine their sources.

AB - The study provides a comprehensive investigation of the geochemical properties of stream and alluvial sediments in an area characterised by a complex natural (geochemical) and anthropogenic environment of the transboundary Mura River (Austria, Slovenia, EU). A total of 65 sediment samples from active river channel and tributaries, and 59 samples from 6 floodplain sediment profiles were collected and analysed. ICP–MS analysis was used to determine the levels of 59 elements in two fractions (<0.063 and 0.063–0.125 mm). Natural (geological) and anthropogenic factors influencing the elemental composition were determined. The sediments showed a low degree of weathering in the upper part of the river and a moderate degree in the middle and lower parts. They are enriched with As, Co, Cr, Cu, Mo, Ni, and Sb compared to the median values for the European stream and floodplain sediments. This can be a consequence of the presence of natural ore mineralisation in Upper Styria along with related lithological features. Factor analysis revealed four natural geochemical associations (K–Ba–Rb–Ga–Li–Tl–Cs–Be–Al–Cu–V; Th–YREE–U; Zr–Hf–Nb; Na–Sr), one anthropogenic association (Cd–In–Zn–Pb) and two combined (geogenic and anthropogenic) associations (Ni–Cr–Mg–Co–V and Fe–Sc–Ti–Nb). Particle analysis by SEM/EDS was used to identify characteristic carriers of specific elements and potentially to determine their sources.

KW - Factor analysis

KW - River sediments

KW - Particle analysis

KW - Particle characterization

U2 - 10.1016/j.catena.2024.108605

DO - 10.1016/j.catena.2024.108605

M3 - Article

VL - 249.2025

JO - Catena

JF - Catena

SN - 0341-8162

IS - February

M1 - 108605

ER -