Contaminants in the Mississippi River
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CIRCULAR 1133
Reston, Virginia, 1995
Edited by Robert H. Meade
Polychlorinated Biphenyls and other Synthetic Organic Contaminants
Associated with Sediments and Fish in the Mississippi River
Colleen E. Rostad, LaDonna M. Bishop, Geoffrey S.
Ellis, Thomas J. Leiker, Stephanie G. Monsterleet, and Wilfred E.
Pereira
Hexachlorobenzene and PCBs in Silts
(Click on image for a larger version, 66K)
Figure 46. -- Many of the sparingly soluble organic
contaminants found in the Mississippi River, such as hexachlorobenzene
and PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls), are associated with the
suspended sediments. Their distributions on the sediments in the
river reflect the sources of the contaminants. Once they are in the
river, many of these contaminants are most concentrated in the
fractions of the sediment that contain the most organic carbon. Data
shown here are for suspended silts collected from the river during
downriver sampling cruises in March 1989 and June 1989. Total PCBs
are defined here as the sum of the penta-, hexa-, hepta-, and
octachlorinated biphenyl homologs. Complete data are tabulated in the
report by Rostad, Bishop, and others (1995).
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A
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Concentrations of hexachlorobenzene in the suspended silt of the
Mississippi River main stem clearly show the two principal sources of
this contaminant. The marked increases near river kilometer 1530 are
due to the input from the Ohio River, which supplies many times more
hexachlorobenzene than does the Upper Mississippi River. A further
increase in hexachlorobenzene occurs as the Lower Mississippi River
flows through Louisiana between St. Francisville (river kilometer 428)
and Belle Chasse (river kilometer 117); this increase is probably
related to the large number of halogenated hydrocarbon manufacturing
industries along this part of the river between Baton Rouge and New
Orleans.
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B
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Organic carbon in the suspended sediment is a strong determinant in
the adsorption of sparingly soluble organic contaminants like
hexachlorobenzene. When the contaminant concentrations are normalized
to organic carbon, as they are in this graph, some of the
irregularities in the contaminant-silt relation are smoothed out. The
suspended silt collected at river kilometer 1920 (Winfield, Missouri)
during March 1989 contained a very high proportion of organic carbon
and a high concentration of hexachlorobenzene for the silt of the
Upper Mississippi River (fig. 46A). However, when the
hexachlorobenzene concentration is expressed in relation to organic
carbon, as it is here in figure 46B, the concentration is consistent
with concentrations measured at other times and locations in the upper
river.
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C
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The concentrations of total PCBs in the suspended silt in the middle
and lower reaches of the Mississippi River are less visibly related to
specific sources than those of a contaminant like hexachlorobenzene.
One reason for this is that the sources of PCBs have been more diverse
and disseminated than those of hexachlorobenzene. Perhaps even more
important is that in the nearly two decades since the disposal of PCBs
into the river has been curtailed, the repeated deposition and
resuspension of contaminated silts has resulted in a partial
homogenization of PCB concentrations along the length of the river and
a blurring of some of the more abrupt changes in distribution that
indicated specific sources.
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D
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PCBs also are strongly associated with the organic carbon in the
suspended sediments of the Mississippi River. By expressing the PCB
concentrations in relation to organic carbon, this graph eliminates
the seemingly anomalous concentration of PCBs measured at kilometer
1920 during March 1989 (fig. 46C) and emphasizes the marked increase
in PCB concentration associated with the influx of suspended sediment
from the Ohio River.
Introduction
Suspended material in the Mississippi River transports the following
sparingly soluble synthetic chlorinated pesticides and industrial
chemicals: aldrin, chlorthalonil, chlordane, DCPA, DDT, DDE, DDD,
dieldrin, endrin, heptachlor, heptachlor epoxide, hexachloro-benzene,
lindane, methoxychlor, mirex, pentachloroanisole, pentachlorobenzene,
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and trifluralin. Although our
analyses detected all of these compounds, the discussion here is
focused on four, whose sources are industrial, agricultural, or
residential. The PCBs are a very stable family of industrial
chemicals previously used primarily in urban and industrial areas in
electrical transformers and capacitors, heat-transfer and hydraulic
fluids, lubricants, plasticizers, and many other products.
Chlordane or chlordan, sold under many names such as
Toxichlor, Chlortox, Dowchlor, and Octachlor, is a broad-spectrum
insecticide formerly used on agricultural land for control of corn
rootworm and on residential land for control of household and lawn
pests. DCPA, also called chlorthal, is sold as Dacthal or Dacthalor
for nonsystemic pre-emergence control of grasses for both agricultural
(radishes, onions, broccoli and cauliflower) and residential uses. Of
these, only DCPA is currently in use. Hexachlorobenzene,
sometimes called HCB or perchlorobenzene, is marketed as
Anticarie, Bent-cure, Bent-no-more, and No Bunt (Royal Society of
Chemistry, 1991). It is a selective fungicide formerly used on wheat
seed but is also a common starting material or by-product used in the
chemical industry. Some of these compounds were first introduced into
the environment as long as 40 years ago, and, although the use of PCBs
and chlordane has been banned in the United States, they still persist
in the environment today because they are not easily degraded. These
compounds were found in sediments from most of the sites we
sampled.
Many toxic chemicals, including most heavy metals and the majority of
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) Priority Pollutants,
are primarily associated with sediments (Ongley and others, 1992).
These sparingly soluble compounds may be transported in the
environment by direct surface runoff or by resuspension of
contaminated bed sediments in rivers. Because they are not water
soluble, they associate with sediment or move into organisms and thus
enter into food chains. They can bioaccumulate; for example, after a
fish eats a contaminated insect, the contaminants are not degraded or
metabolized but instead are retained by the fat in the fish tissue.
The fish eats many insects and continues to accumulate the
contaminants. As additional contaminated insects are consumed, higher
concentrations build up in the fish tissue. Biomagnification takes
place, when each level of the food chain contains higher
concentrations than the level below it. If a bird eats this highly
contaminated fish, the bird may also retain the contaminant in its
tissue. If a human eats the fish, the contaminant can also accumulate
in human tissue.
PCBs, chlordane, DCPA, and hexachlorobenzene usually are detected in
association with the suspended material in the river but not in the
water itself. This behavior is expressed numerically as "partition
coefficients," which for these compounds are large. The partition
coefficient is a laboratory-determined ratio of the amount of a
compound associated with the sediment to the amount associated with
the aqueous phase. It is characteristic of each chemical and ranges
from 1 to 10,000,000. This ratio allows prediction of how the
compound behaves in the environment, because it indicates whether a
compound will be found in the aqueous phase or the sediment phase. A
small partition-coefficient value means the compound will have an
affinity for the aqueous phase, not the sediment phase, and will most
likely remain dissolved under most conditions. A large value means
the compound will instead associate with an organic phase, like the
organic carbon of sediments, or in the fat of fish tissue. Compounds
with large partition coefficients are more likely to be found
associated with available organic matter, whether it is bed sediment,
suspended sediment, fish tissue, or aquatic insects.
Synthetic compounds enter the river from point and nonpoint sources.
Point sources are discrete, such as manufacturing plants or accidental
spills. Although there can be many point sources, each has an
individual effect on the environment at that point as well as
downstream. Nonpoint sources are more general, reflecting overall
widespread usage of chemicals in the environment, such as atrazine
from farmlands. PCBs, which probably came from industrial point
sources in the past, are now widely distributed in the environment,
and as a result, are now considered to be from nonpoint sources.
Chlordane was used extensively on corn and, more recently, on lawns
and in residences for termite control before it was banned by USEPA.
DCPA use is currently residential and agricultural. Both chlordane
and DCPA have been so widely used that their sources are now
considered nonpoint. Hexachlorobenzene, however, has specific
industrial uses as well as agricultural uses, and therefore can come
from point sources as well as nonpoint sources.
The toxicity of these compounds is quite high to some organisms. Most
of the time, however, only trace concentrations of these compounds are
present in environmental waters. The precise health effects of such
trace concentrations are often subtle and, therefore, difficult to
pinpoint in the environment or the general human population. For
example, chlordane is classified by USEPA as a probable human
carcinogen (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1986). Because
chlordane is present in trace amounts in food and water (Cochrane and
others, 1975), and because humans can barely metabolize it, the amount
present in human fatty tissue has been found to increase with age.
The main target organ for carcinogenic effect from chlordane is the
liver, but other organs of the body are also susceptible to its
effects. In a 1973--74 study conducted in Mississippi and Arkansas,
54 percent of human breast milk samples contained chlordane residues
at trace levels or higher (Strassman and Kutz, 1977). At large
concentrations, chlordane is known to cause blood anemia, leukemia,
and problems of the central nervous system.
PCBs from Ohio and Missouri Rivers
(Click on image for a larger version, 50K)
Figure 47. -- Concentrations of organic contaminants
on suspended sediment in the Mississippi River are variable, depending
on which major tributary is contributing the most sediment at the time
of sampling. Shown here are concentrations of total PCBs on suspended
silts in the Lower Mississippi River during two periods of 1990---one
when most of the silt in the main stem was being supplied by the Ohio
River, and another when most was being supplied by the Missouri River.
Complete data are tabulated in the report by Rostad, Bishop, and
others (1995).
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A
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During March 1990, most of the silt being transported in the
Mississippi River system was in or from the Ohio River, and PCB
concentrations were accordingly high. Data in this graph extend from
Uniontown, Kentucky, on the Ohio River, down the Ohio to its
confluence with the Mississippi River, and down the Mississippi to the
Gulf of Mexico. That is, the uppermost 400 kilometers on the graph
represent the lowermost 400 km of the Ohio River, and the Upper
Mississippi is represented as a tributary to the Ohio and Lower
Mississippi Rivers. Concentrations of total PCBs on the suspended
silts were greatest in the Ohio River. All the major tributaries that
joined the Ohio (Wabash, Cumberland, Tennessee, and Upper Mississippi
Rivers) transported silts whose PCB concentrations were less than
those in the Ohio River, which drains a more industrialized area.
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B
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During June 1990, most of the silt being transported in the
Mississippi River was coming from the Missouri River, and PCB
concentrations were accordingly lower than they had been during March.
Data in the graph show PCB concentrations in the main-stem Mississippi
River from Grafton, Illinois, to below New Orleans, Louisiana. PCB
concentrations on silts were greater in the tributary Illinois and
Ohio Rivers than in the main stem. Although most of the silt was
coming from the Missouri River, no silt sample was taken at the time
from the Missouri River itself. The probable concentration range of
10--40 nanograms per gram (ng/g) shown in the graph for PCBs in the
Missouri River was inferred from the five other measurements that were
made between 1988 and 1991 on suspended silts from the Missouri. Of
the major tributaries to the Mississippi River that were sampled from
1988 through 1992, the Missouri River consistently supplied suspended
silts having the smallest concentration of PCBs.
Contaminants Associated with Suspended Silt
PCBs were detected in almost every silt sample we analyzed. They were
most prevalent in the Ohio River, which is the principal source of
PCBs to the Lower Mississippi River (figs. 46C, 46D). The suspended
sediments of other tributaries---the Missouri, White, Arkansas, and
Yazoo Rivers---contain significantly smaller concentrations of PCBs
than those of the Ohio. Within the Upper Mississippi River, PCB
concentrations on suspended silts are greatest between
Minneapolis-St. Paul and Lake Pepin, but they decrease markedly
downriver because Lake Pepin acts as a trap for suspended sediment and
its associated contaminants.
Chlordane also was detected in almost every silt sample we analyzed
from the Mississippi River and its tributaries. In general, its
distribution parallels that of PCBs throughout the river system:
highest concentrations in the Upper Mississippi are found near Lake
Pepin; largest inputs to the Lower Mississippi come from the Ohio
River. Local exceptions do occur, such as the elevated concentrations
of chlordane detected near Keokuk, Iowa, during July and October 1991.
The higher concentrations of chlordane associated with the silt at
this site also are reflected in the fish, for which the State of
Missouri has issued a fish-consumption advisory, (Missouri Department
of Health, 1990).
Total chlordane in this study is the sum of cis-chlordane,
trans-chlordane, and trans-nonachlor. Of the three
components, trans-nonachlor is the most resistant to
environmental degradation. The ratio of cis- and
trans-chlordane to trans-nonachlor is an indicator
of the proportion of recently released chlordane to "weathered"
chlordane. It does not, however, provide a specific time estimate of
the weathering period involved. Weathered chlordane was associated
with the silt during sample periods of spring runoff (March 1989 and
1990), which indicated the source of the chlordane to be resuspension
of bed sediment or runoff of previously contaminated sediment rather
than more recent environmental inputs of chlordane.
DCPA also is ubiquitous on the suspended silts of the Mississippi
River and its principal tributaries. Concentrations of DCPA on silts
usually do not vary widely from one part of the river to another,
which indicates that DCPA comes from widely dispersed nonpoint sources
rather than from specific regions or tributaries.
Hexachlorobenzene, in contrast, has more specific sources in the
Mississippi River Basin. Suspended silts of the Ohio River carry
concentrations of hexachlorobenzene that are consistently greater than
those of the Upper Mississippi and its tributaries (Illinois and
Missouri Rivers) by factors of 5 or more. The concentration of
hexachlorobenzene increases significantly between St. Francisville
(above Baton Rouge) and Belle Chasse (below New Orleans), Louisiana,
as the river flows through an industrial corridor.
PCBs in Silts and Colloids
(Click on image for a larger version, 66K)
Figure 48. -- Large proportions of the organic
contaminants are associated with the colloidal fraction of the
sediments suspended in the Mississippi River. "Colloid" was defined
operationally in this study as the suspended matter that passed
through the ultracentrifuge but was removed by the ultrafilter (see
the chapter on "Sampling the Big Rivers"). In effect, the boundary
between "colloid" and "silt" was about 0.1 micrometer, or one
ten-thousandth of a millimeter. Data shown in the figure are from
samples collected in the Mississippi River and four major tributaries
during the downriver sampling cruise of July-August 1991. Complete
data are tabulated in the report by Rostad, Monsterleet, and others
(1995).
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A
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In suspended sediments of the Mississippi River, concentrations of
total PCBs usually are greater for colloids than for silts---not only
because the colloidal material has more exposed surface area onto
which PCBs can be adsorbed, but because colloids usually contain
larger proportions of organic carbon. Data in the graph show that PCB
concentrations are greatest in the uppermost Mississippi River for
both the silt and colloid. Throughout most of the river system and
the major tributaries, however, concentrations for the colloids are
consistently greater than those for the silts.
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B
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In terms of the total loads of PCBs transported by the Mississippi
River, silt transport is more important than colloidal transport,
simply because there is much more silt than colloid in suspension in
the river. Transports shown in the graph are computed by multiplying
the concentrations shown in figure 48A by the concentrations of silt
and colloid in suspension and the discharge of the water. Even though
concentrations of PCBs in colloids may exceed those in silts by
factors of 2 or 3, the quantities of silt in suspension usually exceed
those of colloids in suspension by factors near 10. Therefore, the
total quantities of PCBs transported down the Mississippi River by
silts are usually 3 to 5 times greater than those transported by
colloids.
Contaminants Associated with Suspended Colloid
Colloids are very small organic or mineral particles that can barely
be seen by the naked eye (Rees and Ranville, 1989). They make the
water slightly turbid and do not settle out with time. Recent studies
of contaminant solubility in natural waters have found higher
concentrations in the aqueous phase than thought possible. These
findings were attributed to the possible presence of colloidal-sized
particles (Baker and others, 1986). Separation of colloids from the
aqueous phase is difficult and very little is known about their
composition and behavior. Enough colloidal material was isolated
during the July and October 1991 cruises for analysis of specific
organic contaminants. Colloids in the Mississippi River average about
10 percent by weight of the total suspended material. Although the
concentration of silt varies, the concentration of colloid seems to be
fairly consistent.
Most toxic compounds travel in association with organic carbon, and
the attribute of colloids that makes them especially important in the
transport of pollutants is their high content of organic carbon. The
colloid sampled in the Mississippi River averaged 15 percent organic
carbon, which was substantially higher than that of the silt (3
percent). Colloidal material from the Upper Mississippi River was
higher in organic carbon content than that from the Lower Mississippi
River.
Colloid particles do not settle. Once a contaminant is adsorbed to a
colloidal particle, its transport is probably consistent along the
length of the river system. Silt transport, however, varies greatly
in response to the variations in velocity, turbulence, and discharge
of the river. The amount of contaminants transported by the colloids
should be consistent, whereas the amount transported by the silt may
vary widely.
Contaminants Associated with Fish
Fish-consumption advisories have been issued at many sites along the
Mississippi River, especially for carp and channel catfish. Most of
these warnings are based on high concentrations in the fish of the
ubiquitous compounds that are also found associated with the suspended
material: PCBs, chlordane, DDT, and dieldrin. According to the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, concentrations of PCBs and chlordane
in the fish in the Mississippi River remained relatively constant from
1976 to 1981 (Schmitt and others, 1983, 1985). The PCBs were most
concentrated in fish in the Mississippi River near Pepin, Wisconsin,
and in the Ohio River. Chlordane residues in fish were greatest in
the Ohio River and in the Mississippi River at Cape Girardeau,
Missouri. Highest hexachlorobenzene concentrations were in fish from
the Mississippi River at Luling, Louisiana. DCPA concentrations in
fish declined slightly from 1976 to 1981.
A study by the Tennessee Department of Health and Environment that
included more than 500 km of the Mississippi River upstream and
downstream from Memphis showed how, in addition to the consistent
background of these compounds, concentrations in fish can sharply
increase near more heavily contaminated areas (Collins and others,
1989). Local studies have found that most severe cases of fish
contamination occur near large urban areas (Iowa Department of Natural
Resources, 1992).
PCBs in Bed Sediments
(Click on image for a larger version, 66K)
Figure 49. -- Concentrations of PCBs stored in the bed
sediments in the navigation pools of the Upper Mississippi River vary from
place to place and according to the times at which the sediments were
deposited.
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A
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In the surficial bed sediments (that is, the sediments no more than 10
cm below the bottoms of the pools), the concentrations of total PCBs
are large below Minneapolis-St. Paul, reach their greatest values in
Lake Pepin, and are significantly smaller in the pools downriver of
Lake Pepin. Data in the graph are from composite samples that were
collected during 1991--92 at 15--20 locations in the lower reaches of
each navigation pool and combined into a single sample (one per pool)
for the analysis of total PCBs. Locations of the navigation pools are
shown in the map on the left side of the figure. "UP" and "LP" in the
graph denote Upper and Lower Lake Pepin. Data are tabulated in the
report by Iverson and others (1995). Lake Pepin is the only large
natural lake on the Mississippi River main stem below
Minneapolis-St. Paul, and it apparently functions as the principal
repository of many of the sediment-associated contaminants discharged
from the metropolitan area. Furthermore, the high concentrations of
organic carbon in this region of the river (see fig. 29D) probably
increase the attraction between PCBs and the local sediments.
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B
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The history of PCB contamination in the Upper Mississippi River is
recorded in the sediments that have been deposited and stored in the
navigation pools. Shown in the graph are the concentrations of total
PCBs in a core taken in March 1989 from the bed sediments in a shallow
backwater in the lower end of Pool 2, a few miles downriver from
Minneapolis-St. Paul. Data were provided by Dan Helwig of the
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, Water Quality Division. Very high
PCB concentrations of 2,000--3,000 nanograms per gram (ng/g) are found
in the sediments deposited when large quantities of PCBs were allowed
to enter the river, probably during the 1950s and 1960s. Following
the cessation of the manufacture of PCBs, and the passage of State and
Federal regulations restricting their use and disposal during the
1970s, concentrations of PCBs on sediments decreased markedly. The
uppermost 35 cm of the core consisted of sediments in which
concentrations consistently averaged about 150 ng/g. Because of the
proximity to the Twin Cities, even these more recent PCB
concentrations are greater than those in sediments stored farther
downriver.
Chlordane and PCBs in Catfish
(Click on image for a larger version, 50K)
Figure 50. -- Although banned for years, many
halogenated organic contaminants persist in rivers and are ingested or
absorbed by fish. Shown in the graphs are the concentrations of
chlordane and PCBs in catfish taken from the Mississippi River and
four of its tributaries during July-August 1987. One to four fish
caught by hook and line at each location were homogenized in a blender
and analyzed for PCBs and chlordane, as well as for other compounds
such as hexachlorobenzene, DCPA, and DDT and its degradation products.
Complete data are tabulated in the report by Leiker and others
(1991).
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A
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Chlordane is especially concentrated in catfish. Concentrations of
chlordane shown here are substantially greater than those on the
suspended sediment in the Mississippi River, which are almost always
less than 10 (often less than 5) nanograms of chlordane per gram of
suspended silt. Chlordane is especially lipophilic-that is,
especially soluble in the fatty tissues of the fish-and difficult to
metabolize. The action level for chlordane of 300 nanograms per gram,
specified by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (USFDA, 1986)
corresponds to the top of the graph.
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B
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PCB concentrations in catfish in the Mississippi River are comparable
to those on suspended sediment. Although the "total" PCB shown here
refers to the sum of the tetra-, penta-, hexa-, and
heptachlorobiphenyls, this total is comparable to that of the penta-,
hexa-, hepta-, and octachlorobiphenyls portrayed in the other figures
of this chapter. The action level for PCBs of 2,000 nanograms per
gram, specified by USFDA (1986), is well above the range of values
shown here.
REFERENCES
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- Influence of
colloids on sediment-water partition coefficients of
polychlorobiphenyl congeners in natural waters: Environmental Science
and Technology, v. 20, p. 1136-1143.
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B.P., 1975,
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chlordane residues in food crops--Interpretation of analytical data:
Journal of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists, v. 58,
no. 5, p. 1051-1061.
-
Collins, R., Robinson, M., and Sinclair, R., 1989, Mississippi River
fish contamination study, 1982:
- Tennessee Department of Health and
Environment, Division of Water Pollution Control, November 1989, 18 p.
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fishes collected during 1990 from the Regional Ambient Fish Tissue
Monitoring sites in Iowa: Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Water
Quality Section, Surface and Groundwater Protection Bureau,
Environmental Protection Division, 47 p.
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J.A., 1995,
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Hydrologic, sedimentologic, and chemical data describing surficial bed
sediments and water in navigation pools of the Upper Mississippi
River, July 1991-April 1992: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report
95-708.
- Leiker, T.J., Rostad, C.E., Barnes, C.R., and Pereira, W.E., 1991,
- A
reconnaissance study of halogenated organic compounds in catfish from
the lower Mississippi River and its major tributaries: Chemosphere,
v. 23, no. 7, p. 817-829.
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chlordane in fish: Jefferson City, Missouri Department of Health, 16
p.
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R.J., 1992,
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chemical management: Hydrobiologia, v. 235/236, p. 177-187.
- Rees, T.F., and Ranville, J.F., 1989,
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the Mississippi River and its major tributaries, in Mallard,
G.E., and Ragone, S.E., eds., U.S. Geological Survey Toxic Substances
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S.G., and Pereira, W.P., 1995,
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sediment from the Mississippi River and some of its tributaries, May
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- Rostad, C.E., Monsterleet, S.G., Bishop, L.M., and Ellis, G.S., 1995,
-
Polychlorinated biphenyls associated with suspended silt and clay and
colloid from the Mississippi River and some of its tributaries,
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Cambridge, England, Royal Society of Chemistry, variously paged.
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-
National pesticide monitoring program: Residues of organochlorine
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freshwater fish, 1980-1981: Archives of Environmental Contamination
and Toxicology, v. 14, p. 225-260.
- Strassman, S.C., and Kutz, R.W., 1977,
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milk from Arkansas and Mississippi, 1973-1974: Pesticide Monitoring
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risk assessment: Federal Register, v. 51, no. 185, September 24, 1986,
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- Compliance policy guide
7141.01: Pesticide residues in food and feed--enforcement criteria,
chap. 41--Pesticides.
Continue to '
Organic Contamination of the Mississippi river from Municipal and
Industrial Wastewater
', or return to '
Contents
'
Contaminants in the Mississippi River
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CIRCULAR 1133
Reston, Virginia, 1995
Edited by Robert H. Meade
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