Why Is Salt Lake Full Of Mercury?

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MIKE STARK | August 8, 2008 06:02 PM EST | AP

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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist Chris Cline marks a cinnamon teal duck egg with an identification number Monday, June 30, 2008, in the marshlands along the shore of Utah's Great Salt Lake. Eggs are then tested for mercury levels. (AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac)

GREAT SALT LAKE, Utah — The Great Salt Lake is so briny that swimmers bob in the water like corks. It is teeming with tiny shrimp that were sold for years in the back of comic books as magical "sea monkeys." And, for reasons scientists cannot explain, it is heavily laden with toxic mercury.

Exactly where the poison is coming from _ and how much danger it poses to the millions of migratory birds that feed on the Great Salt Lake _ are now under investigation.

"We've got a problem, but we don't know how big it is," said Chris Cline, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist who has been collecting the eggs of cinnamon teal ducks from nests along the rim of the lake so that they can be cracked open and analyzed in the lab.

Three years ago, in an alarming finding, U.S. Geological Survey tests showed the lake had some of the highest mercury readings ever recorded in a body of water in the United States. The state warned people not to eat certain kinds of ducks because of the mercury.

This summer, scientists are fanning out across the lake and its marshy shoreline for the start of what is expected to be a multiyear study. The Environmental Protection Agency and the state are footing most of the $280,000 bill for the initial phase.

One major question is whether the mercury is accumulating naturally, from some as-yet-unknown source in the ground, or is the result of industrial pollution. Researchers say mercury released into the atmosphere from coal-fired power plants in the West, gold mines in Nevada, volcanoes in Indonesia or industries in rapidly developing countries such as China or India may be settling in the lake.

Mercury can cause neurological damage in birds and affect their ability to fight off diseases. High mercury levels have been detected in some of the Great Salt Lake's birds. But so far there is no evidence that it is sickening them.

"The jury's kind of still out on the impact, but it can't be a good impact," said Tom Aldrich, migratory gamebird coordinator for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.

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For all of its international recognition, the Great Salt Lake is still a deep source of mystery. The lake is the remnant of a sprawling prehistoric inland sea that covered 20,000 square miles during the last ice age and was 1,000 feet deep in places.

Today's Great Salt Lake is much smaller at 1,700 square miles, much shallower and significantly saltier _ brinier even than the ocean _ because of salts dumped by tributaries and left behind as the water evaporates.

Businesses make millions of dollars selling tiny brine shrimp, salt and other minerals from the lake, and it is a popular spot for boaters and other tourists, despite the often strong rotten-egg smell from decaying algae and other organisms, and despite the fact that practically the only creatures that can survive the salty water are bacteria, bugs and the shrimp. (Scientists say the mercury poses no danger to swimmers.)

But the wetlands and wide expanses of calm water are a powerful draw for birds, including the world's largest concentration of Wilson's pharalope, which uses its needle-like bill to gobble shrimp and bugs; the eared grebe; the white-faced ibis; the California gull; and the snowy plover.

Each year, more than 9 million birds stop by, many on their annual treks between Canada or South America and parts between, making the Great Salt Lake "sort of the Delta airplane hub of the West in terms of migration," Aldrich said.

The problem is that the lake has a peculiar combination of bacteria and chemicals that helps convert inorganic mercury to its more harmful form, methylmercury, scientists say. In some cases, the mercury gets into the brine layer on the lake bottom and makes its way up the food chain to the shrimp and then to the birds that eat them.

Once they have identified the source of the contamination and what sort of threat it poses, scientists hope to somehow reduce the amount of mercury getting into the lake, or perhaps control the bacteria that lead to the more harmful form.

"Hopefully something can be done," said Jodi Gardberg, the state's Great Salt Lake watershed coordinator.

GREAT SALT LAKE, Utah — The Great Salt Lake is so briny that swimmers bob in the water like corks. It is teeming with tiny shrimp that were sold for years in the back of comic books as magical "...
GREAT SALT LAKE, Utah — The Great Salt Lake is so briny that swimmers bob in the water like corks. It is teeming with tiny shrimp that were sold for years in the back of comic books as magical "...
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Mag Corp is one of the dirtiest corporations in the world, It is owned by Ira Rennert who was the model for C. Montgomery Burns of Simpsons fame.
It puts a LOT of Dioxin into the Great Salt Lake.
Don't eat farmed shrimp or prawns.-- which are fed brine shrimp from the Gr Salt Lake.. yechh... mercury, dioxin... time to go back to rice and beans for a while... just to clean out our own bodies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 PM on 08/11/2008
- doctordawg I'm a Fan of doctordawg 9 fans permalink

There's already two coal power plants in Lynndyl, and they want to add another:

"Tim Wagner, with the Utah Smart Energy Campaign and Utah chapter of the Sierra Club, said Wednesday that the new [coal power] plant would emit millions of tons of carbon and mercury into the air, traveling south into the canyons of southern Utah and north into the Salt Lake Valley."

DUH! If you smell the stench of an elephant in your living room, it just might BE the elephant in your living room.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 08/11/2008

Kennecott Copper , one of the largest open pit mines in the world , has it smelting and tailings recovery sites just south of the lake . Close to 100 years too late for a cleanup .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 08/11/2008
- lisakaz2 I'm a Fan of lisakaz2 83 fans permalink
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Poses no risk to the swimmers? Given the mercury contamination in the environment as a whole (I should know; I have mercury poisoning, complete with neurological effects), people should not be swimming in that. Geez, how callous can some be? (And I wouldn't be surprised if dumping or some industrial activity lay behind the levels.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 08/11/2008

So, the scientists collect and crack open the duck eggs along the rim of the lake? Is there another test that doesn't ... uh... kill the ducks?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 PM on 08/11/2008
- jvarga I'm a Fan of jvarga 4 fans permalink

Yes, ask really nicely and they'll tell you their embryonic mercury levels.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 PM on 08/11/2008
- Mort I'm a Fan of Mort 38 fans permalink
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No, those doctors are QUACKS!!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 08/11/2008

Another reason to not visit Utah... wait ... I was never going there anyway. Colorado's enough for me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 08/11/2008
- mlaiuppa I'm a Fan of mlaiuppa 37 fans permalink
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I'm guessing industrial pollution.

Study be damned. Can anything be done to clean the lake while the study is being done?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 08/11/2008
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Because its a dead zone? That whole lake gave me the creeps when I was there. Why would anyone live near it? It stank. It was horrible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 PM on 08/11/2008

My bet's on the mining industry. It's probably the least regulated & the largest polluter in the country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 08/11/2008
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I'm thinking we start with a topographical map from the bigger mines in the region.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 PM on 08/11/2008
- jvarga I'm a Fan of jvarga 4 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 08/11/2008
- shel3364 I'm a Fan of shel3364 32 fans permalink

"despite the often strong rotten-egg smell from decaying algae and other organisms"

I live here and MAN, that stench can be bad....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 08/11/2008
- Mort I'm a Fan of Mort 38 fans permalink
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You can often tell when a storm is coming, what with the lake wafting in the breeze. ;)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 08/11/2008

The brine shrimp are harvested each autumn (is just beginning now). The brine shrimp are sold all over the world to shrimp farms as food. Mercury in brine shrimp=mercury in edible shrimp=mercury in humans. There are times when we fly over the Salt Lake out to Fremont Island and Promontory Point. The water is an opaque, sickening lavender color on the other side of Fremont. I think there is a lot worse floating in the GSL than mercury. I wouldn't put my big toe in the Great Salt Lake.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 08/11/2008
- AmandaBC I'm a Fan of AmandaBC 575 fans permalink
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Utah has very loose environmental regulations. Traditional GOP territory, enough said... Too bad because it's one of the most scenic states...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 08/11/2008
- JScott I'm a Fan of JScott 20 fans permalink

Hmmm I remember seeing a large smokestack of some sort on the west side of the lake looking across from Syracuse UT, could be a possible source?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 08/11/2008
- teachpeace I'm a Fan of teachpeace 2 fans permalink

MagCorp.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 08/11/2008
- viflyer I'm a Fan of viflyer 27 fans permalink

Find me the nearest mine that's poluting the groundwater!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 AM on 08/11/2008
- teachpeace I'm a Fan of teachpeace 2 fans permalink

MagCorp?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 08/11/2008
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