Get the latest Science News and Discoveries

Warming climate is putting more metals into Colorado's mountain streams - EurekAlert


Warming temperatures are causing a steady rise in copper, zinc and sulfate in the waters of Colorado mountain streams affected by acid rock drainage. Concentrations of these metals have roughly doubled in these alpine streams over the past 30 years, presenting a concern for ecosystems, downstream water quality and mining remediation, according to a new study in AGU's journal Water Resources Research. Natural chemical weathering of bedrock is the source of the rising acidity and metals, but the ultimate driver of the trend is climate change, the report found, and the results point to lower stream volumes and exposure of rock once sealed away by ice as the likely causes.

None

Get the Android app

Or read this on Eureka Alert

Read more on:

Photo of Colorado

Colorado

Photo of metals

metals

Photo of mountain streams

mountain streams

Related news:

News photo

Unveiling the mysteries of cell division in embryos with timelapse photography - EurekAlert

News photo

Survey finds loneliness epidemic runs deep among parents - EurekAlert

News photo

Critical minerals recovery from electronic waste - EurekAlert