Remedial Investigation of Water Quality in a Tidal Estuary Using Novel Optical Methods

Grace Chang1, Todd Martin2 and Craig Alexander Jones1, (1)Integral Consulting Inc., Santa Cruz, CA, United States, (2)Integral Consulting Inc., Salt Lake City, UT, United States
Abstract:
Ongoing remedial investigations at the Berry’s Creek Study Area (BCSA), a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Superfund site, are utilizing in situ optical measurements and a partial least-squares regression model to characterize the concentrations and dynamics of chemicals of potential concern (COPC). The BCSA is located in the Meadowlands of northern New Jersey and is an estuary of the Hackensack River that includes expansive tidal marshes. Industrial development at the site since the late nineteenth century has been linked to elevated concentrations of several COPCs, including mercury, methyl mercury, and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), which have the potential to accumulate in fish and other aquatic life to levels that might pose a risk to human health or ecological receptors.

The direct relationship between optical properties and the concentration and nature of optically significant particles and dissolved material has led to the development of optical proxies for the characterization of biogeochemical properties. Due to the hydrophobic nature of COPCs such as mercury and PCBs and their tendency to associate strongly with organic particles that have unique optical signatures, optical measurements thus provide a potential means to quantify the concentration of COPCs. An optical-COPC in situ monitoring program was conducted in the summers of 2014 and 2015 over several spring-neap tidal cycles to evaluate the sources and variability of COPCs in the surface water of the BCSA. These studies were motivated by the need for better understanding of COPC sources to water column-based exposure pathway, primarily to pelagic fish. The specific objectives of the current study were to: (1) characterize COPC sources in the BCSA water column and (2) gain an understanding of COPC concentration dynamics in the water column in the BCSA.