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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Mar. Sci., 03 July 2019
Sec. Marine Pollution

Geochemical Appraisal of Chemical Weathering and Metal Contamination in Coastal Surface Sediments, Off Northwest Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin

\r\nDawei LiuDawei Liu1Baozhi LinBaozhi Lin1Selvaraj Kandasamy,*Selvaraj Kandasamy1,2*Huawei WangHuawei Wang1Qianqian LiuQianqian Liu1Wenbin ZouWenbin Zou1Aimei ZhuAimei Zhu3Jianjun ZouJianjun Zou3Jiann-Yuh LouJiann-Yuh Lou4Xuefa ShiXuefa Shi3
  • 1Department of Geological Oceanography and State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China
  • 2Laboratory for Marine Geology, Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao, China
  • 3Key Laboratory of Marine Sedimentology and Environmental Geology, First Institute of Oceanography, State Oceanic Administration, Qingdao, China
  • 4Department of Marine Science, Republic of China Naval Academy, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan

Coastal sediments not only contain a majority of trace metals, but they also act as a source of dissolved metal ions to the overlying water column. Distinguishing the level of trace metal enrichment from the natural input in sediments is therefore important to determine the distribution and sources of land-derived detritus and pollutants in the coastal region. This study investigates fine (<63 μm) and bulk (<230 μm) fractions of surface sediments from the northwest coast of Hainan Island, South China, for sedimentological and geochemical parameters to evaluate the chemical weathering conditions of source rocks and geochemical processes controlling their distribution. Among seventeen major and trace elements investigated in this study, six elements (Al, Fe, Cr, Ni, V, and Zn) varied spatially. Among four transects investigated, bulk and fine sediments from three northern transects (A, B, and C) behave spatially almost similar, but the sediments from the southernmost transect (D) are characteristically different with higher contents of trace elements because of direct riverine influence with heavy mineral dominance. Range and mean values of weathering indexes, chemical index of alteration (CIA; 59–79 and 73) and chemical index of weathering (CIW; 78–91 and 85) as well as triangular plots of silicate weathering, revealed that sediments were derived from both granitic and basaltic rocks that have undergone moderate chemical weathering processes in the provenance. Normalization of trace elements to Al and the enrichment factor (EF) for fine and bulk sediments showed higher mean EF (>2) for As, Cd, and Pb, suggesting that the sediments were likely enriched by these elements. A comparative study of trace metals concentrations and EF with other coastal regions of China, however, revealed that the study area is in a pristine environmental condition compared to other coastal regions of eastern China. Factor analysis identified three dominant sedimentological and geochemical associations, accounting for ∼70% of total variance, recognize terrigenous input, heavy mineral role and anthropogenic input in controlling the distribution of most elements in the study area.

Introduction

Sediments are the major product of chemical and physical weathering that largely exported to the ocean marginal depocenters such as estuaries and coastal regions by rivers roughly on daily to seasonal basis (Milliman and Syvitski, 1992; Meybeck et al., 2003; Syvitski and Milliman, 2007). Geochemically, these sediments are a mixture of inorganic and organic material, consisting dominantly of solid particulate matter (detritus) or have been incorporated into the sediments from solution (non-detrital) in a number of pathways, but a combination of varying proportions of both in general (Loring, 1991; Loring and Rantala, 1992; Selvaraj et al., 2004, 2010). The geochemical composition of sediments is therefore largely governed by the characteristics of their origin and physicochemical characteristics of the depositional environment and associated natural biogeochemical processes such as diagenesis, adsorption onto/desorption from organic matter, and precipitation-dissolution of Fe–Mn oxyhydroxides (e.g., Berner, 1980). Nevertheless, since the 1950s, owing to frequent waste discharges from modern industrial, agricultural, and domestic activities (Nriagu and Pacyna, 1988; Grimalt et al., 2001), the geochemical composition of estuarine and coastal sediments have been significantly affected by trace metals “contamination” as the sediments are main carriers of trace elements in the aquatic system (Salomons and Förstner, 1980). Industrial effluents and human wastes contain a variety of trace metals and their discharges are considered as huge (Szefer et al., 1995; Rainbow, 2007), in particular tropical and subtropical regions of Asia, where the population density is the highest with mega-industrial set-up.

Distinguishing anthropogenic contribution from that of natural sources on elemental concentration in sediments is vital (Loring and Rantala, 1992; Selvaraj et al., 2010). For that reason, sedimentary geochemical composition is viewed as essential for environmental monitoring and ecosystem assessment programs because they are very sensitive and reliable recorders of both natural and anthropogenic sources of elements at fairly detectable levels (Förstner and Wittmann, 1981; Szefer, 2002). Thus geochemical characteristics of the sediments and sedimentary rocks can be used to infer the weathering trends and the sources of pollution (Fedo et al., 1996; Nesbitt et al., 1996; Nath et al., 2000; Selvaraj et al., 2004; Armstrong-Altrin and Machian-Castillo, 2016). A number of previous studies on the spatial and temporal geochemical records of sediments have delineated recent contamination levels and pollution histories within the estuarine, coastal and shelf regions worldwide (Szefer et al., 1995; Zwolsman et al., 1996; Nolting et al., 1999; Selvaraj et al., 2004, 2010). Given the due consideration of the developing phase of many Asian countries, the critical metal contamination studies of estuarine and coastal regions are rather very limited. Previous studies have investigated major and trace metals in sediments along the coastal and estuarine regions of China, but these studies in general lack of critical evaluation, as many of them have rarely been attempted to differentiate the trace metal content that is associated with aluminosilicates from that of one is sourced from modern activities (e.g., Bastami et al., 2012; Pan and Wang, 2012; Gan et al., 2013), probably due to lack of geochemical knowledge on chemcial weathering of source rocks and sediment genesis. For instance, a critical evaluation of major and trace elemental characteristics of surface and core sediments from the offshore of southwestern Taiwan revealed that sediments were contaminated by few metals due to a non-point source and related biogeochemical changes (Chen and Selvaraj, 2008; Selvaraj et al., 2010).

The Gulf of Tonkin (GOT; also called as Beibu Gulf or Beibu Bay) is a marginal sea of the South China Sea (Figure 1A), playing a key role for the understanding of naturally sourced and anthropogenically induced matter and energy fluxes in the northwestern coastal regions of South China Sea. Recent developments in the western part of the Hainan Island likely drive the gulf as one of the potential areas of future contamination that may alter the sedimentary regime and increase environmental deterioration of the shallow coastal region. Hence, a complete geochemical evaluation of major and trace elemental sources and geochemical processes regulating them need to be addressed. The GOT is also one of the less investigated marginal environments in the South China Sea (e.g., Gao et al., 2017; Figure 1A). A study conducted through the German/Chinese bilateral research has focused on the investigation of hydrographic, sedimentological and geochemical parameters in the GOT (Bauer et al., 2013). They demonstrated that hydrographic parameters not only influence the water column biogeochemistry, but also affect the biogeochemical characteristics of sediments. They also noted accumulation of fine sediments sourced from the South China Sea, as well as Pearl River, through the Qiongzhou Strait due to strong tide-induced currents (Figure 1A). The intensity of river discharges and the transport through Qiongzhou Strait to the gulf are largely controlled by the monsoon strength (Tanabe et al., 2003; Xu et al., 2008). As typhoon-induced rainfall shares ∼30% of total annual precipitation (∼1750 mm) over Hainan Island (Wu et al., 2007), both physical erosion and chemical weathering of source rocks can account for a larger portion of sediment sources to the coastal region (Song, 2009; Xia et al., 2012). In addition to the weathered material, industrial emission and sanitary sewage carried during rainfall are delivered to the coastal zone in the eastern part of the GOT, where concentrations of As, Cr, and Hg were reported to be higher than that of these elements in the open sea (Jin et al., 2011).

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. (A) Satellite image of the Gulf of Tonkin from ESA ENVISAT MERIS, showing the general circulation patterns (yellow arrows) and material inputs (riverine: red arrows; coast parallel: green arrow; and marine: blue arrow). Black arrow on the Hainan Island represents riverine input from the island to the Gulf of Tonkin [modified from Bauer et al. (2013)]. (B) A simplified map of Hainan Island showing major geological formations in the island [modified from Shi et al. (2011), Zhao et al. (2015)]. See text for more details.

Compared to the northern and western parts of the GOT, there is no mega-industrial set-up or dense population centers along the coastal regions of eastern GOT, but aquaculture thrives, implying that the contamination state of sea bed could be better than the northern and western coastal areas of GOT. Nevertheless, surface sediments of coastal regions (<50 m water depths) in the eastern Gulf along the northwest coast of Hainan Island, South China, have never been investigated geochemically, hampering our understanding of geochemical composition of Island-derived sediments and the processes controlling their distribution, including trace metal contamination levels. Here we therefore investigate seventeen major and trace elemental (Al, As, Ca, Cd, Cr, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na, Ni, P, Pb, Ti, V, and Zn) concentrations in surface sediments, along with total organic carbon (TOC) and calcium carbonate (CaCO3) contents, from this region aiming (i) to understand the chemical weathering conditions of source rocks; (ii) to evaluate the metal contamination status of the study area; and (iii) to compare the metal contamination results obtained in this study with the published results from other coastal regions of China. To achieve these objectives, we calculated chemical weathering indices and applied methods of elemental normalization and statistical techniques to the geochemical data of coastal surface sediments in the study area.

Study Area

Hainan Island is located on the northern fringe of the tropical zone in the northern part of the South China Sea (Figure 1B). It is a continental-type island and also the largest tropical island of South China, with a surface area of 35.4 × 103 km2 (Hu et al., 2014; Jiang et al., 2018). Hainan Island contains diverse rocks with a range of ages (Figure 1B). Although the island is dominated by Paleozoic-Mesozoic granitic rocks, which account for ∼40% of the island’s land area, Cenozoic basalts are distributed widely in the northern part of island (Hu et al., 2014). While Late Paleozoic to Mesozoic granitoids and Cenozoic basalts are dominantly exposed on the island, Proterozoic, Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic rocks occur as isolated outcrops (Hu et al., 2014; Xu et al., 2014). Most granitoids are exposed in the central and southern parts of Hainan Island, and basalts are distributed in the northern part of the island (Figure 1B). Paleozoic-Mesozoic sedimentary rocks are widely developed in the west and scattered in the east Hainan Island. Paleozoic sedimentary rocks are shallow-marine strata, consisting of sandstone, slate and limestone, while Mesozoic sedimentary rocks are terrestrial strata, dominating by volcanic-clastic rocks. Additionally, Quaternary sediments are widely distributed in the coastal plain around Hainan Island (Figure 1B). The annual mean temperature ranges from 22.8 to 25.8°C and the annual mean rainfall varies between ∼960 and 2150 mm, with lower rainfall in the rain shadow western part of the island.

Owing to East Asian monsoon climate, rivers traversing Hainan Island discharge approximately 14 × 1010 m3 annually into the South China Sea, of which 3 × 1010 m3 occurs during summer season (May–October), when tropical storms (typhoons) hit the island frequently (Yang et al., 2013; Zhang et al., 2013). Bauer et al. (2013) suggested that the coastal region of the gulf may receive material mainly from rivers entering the GOT at the north coast or along the west coast of Hainan Island. River loads from the Red River and smaller rivers in the northern coastal area (Tang et al., 2003) are transported southward through the GOT interacts with the surrounding South China Sea through water mass exchanges (Wu et al., 2008). The sediments that delivered from the Pearl River located ∼400 km away to the northeast may also reach the gulf through the Qiongzhou Strait (Tang et al., 2003). Rivers on the Hainan Island delivered about 4 million tons of sediments into the South China Sea annually, in which the three largest rivers – Nandu, Changhua, and Wanquan – contribute ca. 0.84, 0.52, and 0.52 million tons, respectively (Li, 1992).

The GOT is a shallow, crescent-shaped, subtropical basin with an area of 12.93 × 104 km2 and situated in the northwest of South China Sea (Figure 1B). It is surrounded by Leizhou Peninsula, Hainan Island, Guangxi Province, and Vietnam (Figures 1, 2). The mean water depth of the GOT is ∼42 m with the deepest part goes down to ∼100 m. Wind, tidal currents and currents outside the gulf largely regulate the circulation in the Gulf (Chen et al., 2009). The surface circulation reverses from a winter cyclonic to a summer anticyclonic due to change from NE to SW monsoon winds (Manh and Yanagi, 1997, 2000). Wu et al. (2008) argued that despite the surface wind stress is monsoonal – southwesterly in the summer and northeasterly in the winter – the circulation is cyclonic in all seasons in the gulf. The tide-induced westward mean transport of ∼0.1–0.2 Sv through Qiongzhou Strait into the GOT thought to be a key factor for the cyclonic circulation in the summer as well as for other seasons (Shi et al., 2002; Cai et al., 2003). The marine influence from the south is mainly driven by tidal waves propagating into the gulf through the wide opening with a current velocity of ∼40 cm s-1 (Manh and Yanagi, 1997). The measurement of full tidal cycle (25 h) at one station in the gulf revealed a southeasterly directed mean water movement of 22.8 and 26.8 km d-1 at the surface and at 50 m depth, respectively. Sea bed sediment distribution is complex and is strongly influenced by current changes due to seasonal monsoons (summer and winter) and varying sources of terrigenous clastic (Coleman, 1969). The depositional center of the gulf and local depressions are largely filled with fine-grained sediments, but sandy deposits mostly seen in the shallow coastal regions (Su and Wang, 1994). A recent study has identified through zircon age spectrum that sand derived from the western and southern Hainan Island is characterized a strong ∼100 Ma peak (Fyhn et al., 2019). The present investigation focuses on the northwest coastal region of Hainan Island, from Chengmai Town to Changhua River (Figure 2).

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2. Map of Gulf of Tonkin showing locations of surface sediments collected for the geochemical study. Samples were collected along four transects, namely Chengmai (A), Lingao (B), Baimajing (C), and Changhua (D). Also shown are enlarged views of these transects and surface sediments locations with sample numbers.

Materials and Methods

Sampling

During November 2013, twenty-five surface sediments were collected with a Petersen stainless steel grab sampler (15 × 25 cm inner diameter) using local fishing vessels across the northwest coast of Hainan Island along four transects, A through D (namely Chengmai, Lingao, Baimajing, and Changhua; Figure 2). Water depth in the present study area is shallow with the deepest sampling site is <20 m. Sediment samples from the top 5 cm were carefully scooped from the grab sampler, placed in polyethylene bags and stored in ice-box below 4°C onboard and then transported to State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University. The number of samples collected in each transect depends on the nature of bottom sediments and the speed of underwater currents, given that we failed to grab samples in some stations either of these two reasons. However, at least four representative samples were collected in each transect with a maximum of nine samples along transect A. Coastal aquaculture is the major economic activity in the area, especially in transects A and B, whereas building factories seen adjoining the transect C due to the development of aquaculture along the coastal regions. A big wharf is located on the bay of transect D (Figure 2).

Geochemical Analysis

Each freeze-dried sample was homogenized by removing particles of >2 mm and then separated into fine (<63 μm) and bulk sediments (<230 μm) using appropriate sieves. Grain size analysis of <2 mm fraction of each sediment was carried out with a Coulter LS-100 laser particle size analyzer, as detailed in Janitzky (1986). Briefly, samples were treated with HCl and H2O2 to remove carbonate and organic matter, respectively. In the final stage, sodium hexametaphosphate was added to prevent the flocculation of clay minerals and the samples received a short period of ultrasonic agitation before the measurement (Selvaraj et al., 2016).

For the TOC measurement, ∼1 g finely grounded sediment was transferred to 50 ml centrifuge tube and about 20 ml of 1N HCl was added to convert inorganic carbon into carbon dioxide. After 16 h, decarbonated samples were centrifuged at 4500 r/min for 20 min and dried at 50°C for HCl evaporation after decanting the supernatant and then the samples were measured for TOC with Elemental Analyzer (ANCA-GSL; Europa Scientific, Crewe, United Kingdom). Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) content was determined by titration using the procedure detailed in Loring and Rantala (1992).

For major and trace elemental analyses, each powdered sediment sample was oven-dried at 105°C for 3 h. 50 mg of each aliquot transferred into the Teflon beakers was digested with ultrapure HF and HNO3, as detailed in Zou et al. (2012). Selected major (Al, Ca, Fe, Mg, Na, K, and Ti), minor (Mn and P), and trace (Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, V, and Zn) elements were determined by Inductively Coupled Plasma-Optical Emission Spectrometry (ICP-OES; Thermo Scientific iCAP 6000). In addition, specific trace elements, such as arsenic (As) and cadmium (Cd), that are also associated with modern anthropogenic sources, were analyzed with Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS; Thermo Scientific XSERIES 2). Precision for most elements at the concentrations present in the reference material GSD-9 is less than 5% relative standard deviation. All sedimentological and geochemical data of the present study are listed in Supplementary Table 1.

Results

The surface sediments investigated here are mainly composed of sand and silt. Sand content ranged from 49 to 89% with a mean of 65%, whereas silt content varied between 9 and 47% with a mean of 32%. Clay content is very low (2–4%). Mud content (<63 μm) varied from 11 to 51% with a mean content of 35%, indicating the dominance of silt-sized (4–63 μm) material in the fine fraction of most sediments. TOC and CaCO3 contents in general play opposite roles, as the former adsorbs but the latter dilutes, on the concentration and distribution of many trace metals in sediments (Loring and Rantala, 1992). TOC content in surface sediments varied from 0.04 to 1.28% with a mean TOC of 0.73%, whereas CaCO3 ranged from 0.33 to 25.4% with a mean of 7.9%. CaCO3 contents of most samples were <13%, except four samples (A16, B12, C4, and D11; Figure 1) with >13%, suggesting the overall dominance of detrital elements in these sediments without any significant relationship among these three variables, i.e., grain size, TOC and CaCO3. Higher contents of CaCO3 in these samples seem to be attributed either to the dominance of marine productivity (C4 and D11; Figure 2) or the influence of aquaculture activity (A16 and B12; Figure 2).

The range and standard deviation (SD) of all major oxides and trace elements are (Supplementary Table 1): TiO2 (0.49–4.47%, 0.58), Al2O3 (3.77–15.24%, 2.50), TFe2O3 (2.66–41.01%, 5.42), MnO (0.04–0.26%, 0.03), MgO (0.46–2.19%, 0.42), CaO (1.01–9.97%, 1.92), Na2O (0.96–2.95%, 0.47), K2O (1.24–3.98%, 0.37), P2O5 (0.05–0.23%, 0.03), As (4.6–16 ppm, 2.61), Cd (0.08–4.87 ppm, 0.73), Cr (12–86 ppm, 17.85), Cu (8–143 ppm, 23.03), Pb (19–98 ppm, 11.16), Ni (7–59 ppm, 10.38), V (23–145 ppm, 26.02), and Zn (20–120 ppm, 23.17). High SD values for TFe2O3, Cr, V, Zn, Ni, Cu, and Pb are probably either due to different textural characteristics of sediments or the variable riverine influence in different transects sampled and/or influence of basaltic outcrops in some sampled locations (e.g., D03, D11, and D13 in Figure 2), as these three stations contain extremely high contents of these elements (Supplementary Table 1. Range and mean values obtained in this study are similar to the reported values of major and trace elements in surface sediments of the eastern part of the GOT (Dou et al., 2013) as well as in riverine sediments and soils in the Hainan Island (Zhao et al., 2015; Jiang et al., 2018).

Discussion

Major Element Geochemistry

Sediments in coastal and offshore areas are mixtures of aluminosilicates and carbonate debris with minor content of organic matter. For the geochemical appraisal of sediments, previous studies have provided a variety of reference materials such as upper continental crust (UCC; Taylor and McLennan, 1985), upper crust of Yangtze Craton (UC-YC; Gao et al., 1998), average shale (AS; Turekian and Wedepohl, 1961), Post-Archaean Australian shale (PAAS; Taylor and McLennan, 1985) and North American shale composite (NASC; Gromet et al., 1984). In this study, the chemical compositions of UC-YC and average shale along with UCC are used for the purpose of initial evaluation of geochemical characteristics of sediments. We choose the UC-YC because Hainan Island and South China share almost similar lithological characteristics, whereas average shale is compositionally compatible with the fine fraction (<63 μm) of most estuarine and coastal sediments (Loring and Rantala, 1992).

Among four transects (A–D) investigated in this study, most major elements (Ti, Mn, Mg, Na, and P) spatially show more or less similar mean concentrations in both bulk (<230 μm) and fine (<63 μm) sediments (Figure 3). However, Al varied between 4.88 ± 1.81 and 7.29 ± 0.35% in bulk sediments and from 4.11 ± 2.38 to 7.29 ± 0.51% in fine sediments, with higher contents in the northern transects (A and B; Figure 3) and lower contents in the southern transect (D) (Figure 2). Likewise, Fe spatially varied from 3.06 ± 0.63 to 4.20 ± 0.63% and 2.86 ± 0.45 to 15.55 ± 11.86% in bulk and fine sediments, respectively, with the highest Fe is noted in transect D (Figure 3), especially at station D03, which is proximal to the confluence of Changhua River. Ca and K spatially vary slightly in both bulk and fine sediments (Figure 3).

FIGURE 3
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Figure 3. Transect-wise (A–D) mean (± SD) concentrations of major elements in bulk (<230 μm) and fine (<63 μm) sediments investigated from off northwest Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin, showing the spatial variability. Note the odd trend of samples from transect D due to the riverine influence with heavy mineral dominance.

Table 1 compares the mean contents of major elements of this study with data from the UCC (Taylor and McLennan, 1985), UC-YC (Gao et al., 1998) and average shale (Turekian and Wedepohl, 1961). Mean values of most elements, except Ti, Fe, Ca, and Na, fluctuate around those values in average shale and UC-YC, suggesting that sediments were primarily derived from rocks in the hinterland that surrounds the Gulf. Ratios of elements in sediments divided by the same elements in the reference materials can illustrate the leach and enrichment status of major elements during weathering processes, as the ratio equal to 1 suggests no enrichment/depletion, >1 indicates enrichment and <1 indicates depletion (Liu et al., 2012). It is evident from Figure 4 that Ti, Fe, and Na show ratios >1, indicating their enrichment in sediments than the reference compositions due likely to the influence of ilmenite (Ti and Fe) and sea salt (Na, as sea salt is associated mostly with fine sediments).

TABLE 1
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Table 1. Summary statistics of major elements (%) in surface sediments along the west coast of Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin.

FIGURE 4
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Figure 4. Ratios of concentrations of major elements in surface sediments of the Gulf of Tonkin to those values in upper crust of Yangtze Craton (UC-YC) and average shale.

Calvert et al. (1993) suggested that assessment of major elemental variation in terms of elemental normalization would normally yield better understanding of elemental behaviors because such ratios can be interpreted in terms of the texture and mineralogy. The assumption of such normalization is that the reference element used such as Al or Li represents a certain mineral fraction of the sediments (Loring, 1991; Loring and Rantala, 1992). Since Al is a conservative indicator for the terrigenous source and its anthropogenic input is very limited (Nath et al., 1989; Loring and Rantala, 1992), here we prefer Al as a normalizer. Element/Al ratios of all major elements show more or less similar patterns of element/Al ratios in UC-YC and average shale (Table 2), suggesting that these sediments were largely sourced from erosion and/or chemical weathering of rocks from the surrounding landmasses (most likely Hainan Island and Leizhou Peninsula; Figure 2). Ti is a refractory element and is immobile in the marine environment and thus is considered to be detrital in origin (Bischoff et al., 1979). The mean Ti/Al ratios of bulk (0.08) and fine (0.14) sediments are greater than the Ti/Al ratio in UC-YC (0.05) and average shale (0.05), while the Al-normalized Fe (0.58 and 1.20), Mn (0.009 and 0.013), Mg (0.16 and 0.16), K (0.31 and 0.29), and P (0.008 and 0.010) are more or less similar to these ratios both in UC-YC and average shale (Table 2). The linear regression between Al and major elements such as Mg (r = 0.81) and Na (r = 0.69) indicate that these elements were probably derived from terrigenous source (Table 3). The strong positive correlation of Ti with Fe (r = 0.96), Mn (r = 0.93), and P (r = 0.71) suggests either the presence of ilmenite mineral in sediments or early diagenesis and associated Fe–Mn oxyhydroxides precipitation in the surface sediments and/or combination of both (Chen and Selvaraj, 2008).

TABLE 2
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Table 2. Summary statistics of major element/Al ratios in surface sediments along the west coast of Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin, and their weathering indexes (CIA and CIW) compared with reference compositions.

TABLE 3
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Table 3. Correlation coefficients (r) between different pairs of sedimentological and geochemical variables (N = 50).

Smaller cations such as Ca, Na, and Sr are selectively leached during weathering processes (Figure 4), while larger cations remain fixed in the weathered detritus (Nesbitt and Markovics, 1980; Fedo et al., 1996). The changes in composition of siliciclastic sediments can help to investigate the probable source rocks where from sediments were derived. Quantitative determination of weathering conditions of sediments can thus be made by the calculation of chemical index of alteration (CIA; Nesbitt and Young, 1982) and chemical index of weathering (CIW; Harnois, 1988) according to the following formulas:

CIA=[ Al2O3Al2O3+CaO*+Na2O+K2O ]×100(1)
CIW=[ Al2O3Al2O3+CaO*+Na2O ]×100(2)

In these equations, all contents of major oxides are in molar proportions and CaO refers to CaO associated with the silicate fraction of the sample. By calculating the loss of mobile elements (Ca, Na, and K) against immobile Al, these weathering indexes can reflect the conditions of chemical weathering of source rocks. CIA values between 45 and 55 refer to absence of weathering, and CIA lower than 60 means low weathering, between 60 and 80 stand for moderate chemical weathering, and CIA values >80 indicate intense weathering of source rocks (Nesbitt and Young, 1982; Selvaraj and Chen, 2006; Liu et al., 2012). In the present study, mean CIA values of fine and bulk sediments are 72 and 71 (Table 2), respectively, indicating moderate chemical weathering of source rocks. Consistent to this interpretation, the mean CIW values of fine and bulk sediments are 81 and 79 (Table 2), respectively. The CIA and CIW values together reveal that the sediments of present study might be dominantly derived from felsic source rocks (e.g., granite, granodiorite) that have undergone moderate chemical weathering (Table 2).

In order to get information about weathering trends, the molar proportions of major oxides of samples are plotted in A-CN-K (Al2O3–(CaO+Na2O)–K2O) and A-CNK-FM (Al2O3–(CaO+Na2O+K2O)–FeOT +MgO) ternary diagrams (Figure 5), along with reference compositions, including river particulates and different kinds of basalts. All samples of present study fall midway between the Al2O3 apex and feldspar join, in particular between illite and smectite compositions of ∼70–80 CIA values. This indicates that the sediments of Gulf of Tonkin have undergone moderate weathering process during when Al2O3 content enriched, while CaO, Na2O, and K2O depleted variably. Distributions of some fine and bulk sediments in Figure 5 are not parallel to the Al2O3–CaO+Na2O join, implying that the sediments were not only derived from felsic (granite) sources (Fedo et al., 1996), but may also be derived from basalts. Consistent to this inference, in a mafic diagram of A-CNK-FM, almost all samples plot between feldspar and smectite compositions with a few samples plot toward FeOT + MgO apex, suggesting the preferential enrichment of Fe and Mg oxides in these samples due likely to basaltic source rocks, although most samples were derived from granitic-charnockite sources.

FIGURE 5
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Figure 5. Triangular silicate weathering diagrams (A-CN-K and A-CNK-FM) showing surface sediments from the Gulf of Tonkin. Also shown are reference compositions, upper continental crust (UCC; Taylor and McLennan, 1985), upper crust of Yangtze Craton (UC-YC; Gao et al., 1998), average shale and other river particulates.

Trace Element Geochemistry

Spatially, Cr and Ni varied from 24 ± 11 to 78 ± 5 ppm and 12 ± 5 to 37 ± 3 ppm in bulk sediments with higher and lower concentrations are evident, consistent to the Al behavior, in transects A and D, respectively (Figure 6). Compared to these two trace elements, V and Zn showed large variations (V: 45 ± 22–110 ± 7 ppm; Zn: 49 ± 30–107 ± 7 ppm) in bulk sediments. The former two trace elements spatially varied more narrowly among transects with high concentrations (Cr: 53 ± 28–77 ± 4 ppm and Ni: 28 ± 3–38 ± 4 ppm) in fine sediments, whereas the latter two trace elements varied widely (V: 69 ± 11–106 ± 9 ppm and Zn: 68 ± 12–98 ± 10 ppm). Similar variability of these elements is also evident in fine sediments, but with less magnitude (Figure 6). Among four transects investigated, bulk and fine sediments from three northern transects (A, B, and C) behave spatially almost similar, but the sediments from the fourth southernmost transect (D; Figure 2) are characteristically different with high contents of trace elements because of direct riverine influence with heavy mineral dominance. Spatial variability of trace elements, in particular Cr, Ni, V, and Zn, is larger in bulk than fine sediments, suggesting that dilution by coarse fraction likely plays a critical role in controlling most trace elements variability in sediments, off northwest coast of Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin (Figure 6).

FIGURE 6
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Figure 6. Transect-wise (A–D) mean (± SD) concentrations trace elements in bulk (<230 μm) and fine (<63 μm) sediments investigated from off northwest Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin, illustrating spatial variabilities. Note the odd trend of samples from transect D due to the riverine influence with heavy mineral dominance.

Table 4 compares the mean concentrations of six selected trace metals in fine and bulk sediments with concentrations of those metals obtained from other coastal regions of East China as well as reference compositions such as UCC, UC-YC and average shale. Mean As content in fine and bulk sediments (11 ppm) is similar to its level in average shale, but lower than the As content in sediments of Xiamen Bay and northern South China Sea (Table 4). Cadmium contents in fine (0.37 ppm) and bulk (0.22 ppm) sediments fall within the range published in previous studies, but higher than the Cd content in UCC (0.1 ppm) and UC-YC (0.08 ppm) and roughly similar to Cd in average shale (0.3 ppm), but lower than found in Shenzhen and Quanzhou Bays sediments (Yu et al., 2008; Zuo et al., 2009). Concentrations of Cd in fine sediments are relatively higher than those in bulk sediments due likely to the different adsorption capability of mud and sand. The mean Cr values in fine (69 ppm) and bulk (64 ppm) sediments are lower than that in average shale (90 ppm) but similar to the reported Cr in UC-YC (66 ppm) and also fall within the range reported for most coastal regions in East China (Table 4). Moreover, Cu values of fine and bulk sediments are apparently lower than Cu in average shale and UC-YC. Pb in fine (35 ppm) and bulk (36 ppm) sediments are higher than those in average shale (20 ppm) and UC-YC (17 ppm), indicating that surface sediments of Gulf of Tonkin are likely contaminated by Pb from anthropogenic sources. Zinc concentrations in fine and bulk sediments (87 and 90 ppm) lie between its concentration in UC-YC (70 ppm) and average shale (95 ppm).

TABLE 4
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Table 4. Mean concentrations (ppm) of total trace metals in coastal surface sediments in the Gulf of Tonkin compared with the reported values of trace metals from other areas of the Gulf and China. Also shown are the values of trace metals from some reference materials.

Sediments are considered as an ideal sink for many trace metals, which could switch from sediments to the overlying water column due to changes in pH and Eh of depositional environments (Sundelin and Eriksson, 2001). Urbanization and industrialization have caused an increasing metal pollution in the coastal and estuarine regions of China for the past around 2–3 decades. Statistical data from the Chinese government indicated that nearly 30,000 km2 of coastal areas of China have already been contaminated/polluted by trace metals (NBO, 2009). These data further revealed that anthropogenic inputs through industrial and sewage discharges as well as mining and smelting operations are important sources of metal contamination in Chinese coastal areas. Comparison of trace elemental concentrations of sediments in the Gulf of Tonkin with other coastal regions of East China reveals that concentrations of trace metals in the study area are lower than average values reported for other coastal regions (Table 4), suggesting the unpolluted nature of the coastal sites of the Gulf. This comparison further reveals that the pollution state of our study area is not as serious as other coastal regions in mainland China. The highly developed areas, such as Yangtze River delta, the Pearl River delta, and the Beijing–Tianjin–Tangshan industrial area, contain more serious problems of trace metal pollution than other relatively less developed areas (Pan and Wang, 2012). Our literature survey of papers published from estuarine and coastal regions in China revealed that metals such as As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Ni, Pb, and Zn are main pollutants and their concentrations are in general higher in northern coastal regions of East China. Likewise, the Pearl River delta, one of the most industrialized and urbanized regions in South China, seems to contribute the majority of metal pollutants to southeast coastal area of China. Meng et al. (2013) used integrated biomarker response to assess the environmental quality of ecosystem along the GOT. They also investigated metal and PCBs contents in surface sediments collected along the coast of GOT, northern South China Sea, and suggested that the contamination degree in whole area of the Gulf was moderate. As there were no significant correlations between biomarkers and pollutants, Meng et al. (2013) attributed this condition to low amount of contaminants, which were not enough to promote significant biomarker responses.

Table 3 shows correlation coefficients (r) between different pairs of variables. The positive correlation of Al with Mg (0.81), Na (0.69), Cr (0.63), Ni (0.82), V (0.55), and Zn (0.78) reveals the association of these elements in lattices of aluminosilicates derived from continental origin as well as their natural variability in sediments (Chen and Selvaraj, 2008). Titanium, another detrital indicator similar to Al, is positively correlated with Fe (0.96), P (0.71), and Mn (0.93), confirming the presence of ferromagnesian minerals and ilmenite (FeTiO3), given that titanium is known to be easily associated with Fe-oxide phases (Koschinsky et al., 1997; Jiang et al., 2018). Such interpretation is consistent with behaviors of Cr, Ni, V and Zn, all showing linear relationships with Al, Fe, and Ti (Figure 7). As Hainan Island is rich in ilmenite, the above association of Fe, Ti, and Mn is likely influenced by heavy minerals, such as ilmenite, although we never undertake any mineralogical investigation in the present study to prove the presence of ilmenite phase in sediments. Sediment collected from the D03 site close to the confluence of Changhua River has a special characteristic as it has connected to the ocean during flood tide and isolated during ebb tide. Thus surface sediment at this site may undergo early diagenetic enhancement of Fe–Mn oxyhydroxides and also contains the highest Fe and Ti concentrations due to ilmenite. This interpretation is further supported by very high concentrations of Mn and other elements [P – 2300 ppm, Ti – 44723 ppm, Cr – 83 ppm, and V – 145 ppm] at D03 sampling site (Supplementary Table 1 and Figures 2, 3, 6).

FIGURE 7
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Figure 7. Bi-plots showing linear relationships between major elements (Fe, Ti, and Al) and trace elements (Cr, Ni, V, and Zn) both in fine and bulk factions of surface sediments.

Normalization and Enrichment Factors

Normalization is widely used as an appropriate approach to separate trace metals of natural sources from anthropogenic inputs with sediments. Previous studies have suggested that the normalization is a good way to distinguish these two sources in sediments. Common normalizers, including Al (Windom et al., 1989), Li (Loring, 1991), and Yb (Szefer et al., 1999). In this study, both Al and Ti were tried but finally Al was chosen for the purpose of normalization because Al has better correlation coefficients with other trace metals than Ti does (Figure 7 and Table 3). Anthropogenic emission of Al is very limited, implying that Al in surface sediments is almost from natural sources.

Normalization is also useful to calculate enrichment factor (EF) of trace metals. By calculating EF of trace metals, we can approximately distinguish anthropogenic contribution from natural sources. In this study, as sediments were mostly derived from physical erosion and/or chemical weathering of rocks from the surrounding landmasses (Figure 4), average shale and UC-YC were chosen to be two reference materials for the calculation of EF by using the equation:

EF=(MeAl)sample(MeAl)UC-YCoraverageshale(3)

where (Me/Al)sample and (Me/Al)UC-YC or average shale are the concentrations of metal to Al ratio in the studied samples and in reference compositions such as UC-YC or average shale. Table 5 presents the calculated EF for eight trace elements (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, V, and Zn) with respect to average shale and UC-YC. Arsenic shows high mean EF values for both fine (3.72) and bulk (3.47) sediments with respect to UC-YC, whereas it exhibits relatively low mean EF values (1.22 and 1.14) compared to average shale. The high EF for Cd in fine sediments against average shale and UC-YC are obviously higher than EF of Cd in bulk sediments because of abnormal values that associated with sample D03 (23.3; Table 5), much greater than EF reported for other coastal regions. After excluding this site from the calculation, the mean EF for Cd in fine sediments is 1.04 against average shale and 3.38 against UC-YC. EF for Pb with respect to average shale (2.58 for fine and 2.44 for bulk sediments) and UC-YC (2.55 for fine and 2.42 for bulk sediments) are higher than 2, implying that some amount of Pb was from anthropogenic sources. In general, EF for Cr, Cu, Ni, V, and Zn both in fine and bulk sediments with respect to average shale and UC-YC are <2 (Table 5), indicating that these metals are mainly associated with aluminosilicates of terrigenous sources and anthropogenic input of these metals in the study area is less likely.

TABLE 5
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Table 5. Summary statistics of enrichment factor (EF) calculated with respect to average shale (Turekian and Wedepohl, 1961) and the upper crust of Yangtze Craton (UC-YC; Gao et al., 1998) for coastal surface sediments from the northwest coast of Hainan Island. See section Normalization and Enrichment Factors for the calculation of EF.

In this study, EF values vary significantly based on the usage of different reference materials. For instance, EFs with respect to UCC show extremely abnormal values for As in fine (range: 8.39–30.77; mean 17.54) and bulk sediments (range: 7.58–36.68; mean 17.10), which are obviously higher than EFs of As with respect to average shale and UC-YC. Chen and Selvaraj (2008) pointed out that the UCC composition cannot be used as a reference material to investigate the anthropogenic impact on sediments derived from small oceanic island. In general, the calculation of EF of eight trace elements suggests that the investigated region is slightly contaminated only by Pb (EF>2). EFs for fine sediments are slightly higher than that of bulk sediments for most investigated trace metals (Table 5), revealing the preferential association of trace elements with finer rather than coarser/bulk sediments, given that the former holds more surface area than the latter for adsorption of dissolved metals from the water column (Krumgalz et al., 1992).

Elemental Provenance

In order to determine the factors controlling major and trace elemental distribution in surface sediments, sedimentological and geochemical data were subjected to statistical analysis. Geochemical factor analysis is a proper way to do this because it provides information about the association of metal-inorganic and metal-organic phases (Winters and Buckley, 1992). Therefore, the entire geochemical data set of bulk and fine sediments, including sand, silt and clay as well as TOC and CaCO3 contents, was run with the SPSS (version 17.0) software using Varimax rotation scheme with Kaiser Normalization. Three factors were found (eigenvalues >2) to explain the 70% of the total variance (34, 25, and 11%, respectively; Table 6). Factor 1 had positive loadings for major and minor elements such as Al, Mg, Na, and P along with trace elements Cr, Pb, Ni, V, and Zn. Aluminum is a conservative element and a major constituent of clay minerals which is the predominant carrier phase for trace metals (Alexander et al., 1993; Selvaraj et al., 2004), and anthropogenic input of Al is a very rare phenomenon. Significant correlations of Al with Mg (0.81), Na (0.69), Cr (0.63), Ni (0.82), V (0.55), and Zn (0.78) in our sediments (Table 3) indicate roles of aluminosilicates in harboring these trace elements. TOC is positively correlated with some major (Al, Mg, and Na) and trace elements (Cu and Ni), including sand content (Table 3). Association of some of the major (Al) and trace (Cu and Ni) elements with TOC may suggest that Cu and Ni might also be associated with organic matter, implying that TOC in these sediments are likely in the form of coarse plant fragments that are associated with sand, as clay content has no relationship with TOC (Tables 3, 6). Low negative loadings for Ca and CaCO3 perhaps suggest the role of dilution by biogenic components such as carbonate on detrital components in coastal sediments. Overall, Factor 1 characterizes terrigenous input as the dominant controlling factor of sediment geochemistry in the coastal region, off the northwestern Hainan Island.

TABLE 6
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Table 6. Varimax rotated factor matrix for surface sediments geochemical data from the Gulf of Tonkin.

Factor 2 had positive loadings for Ti, Fe, Mn, P, and Cd, the group of elements that characterizes either the influence of Fe-Ti oxides, in particular ilmenite (FeTiO3) or the precipitation of Fe–Mn oxyhydroxides in surface sediments along with P and Cd. Based on the detailed mineral chemistry of basalts in Hainan Island, Ho et al. (2000) suggested that low pressure fractional crystallization of olivine, clinopyroxene, plagioclase and Fe-Ti oxides from primitive magma. McLennan (2000) noted that basalt-derived sediments dominantly contain Fe- and Ti-bearing heavy minerals. In addition, the mining area of Shilu iron ore deposit is located in Changhua (Xu et al., 2013), west Hainan Island, near Changhua River, and Hainan Island is also the largest store of ilmenite in China; both may likely be responsible for the association of Fe, Ti, and Cd in sediments. P is also loaded in Factor 2 likely because it shows a great adsorption affinity with Fe–Mn oxyhydroxides in oxic surface sediments. Negative but weak loading for TOC implies that the association in Factor 2 is largely driven by heavy minerals like ilmenite, and thus the role of TOC is less likely.

Factor 3 accounts for 11% of total variance and was positively loaded with K, As, and Cu, but negatively loaded with Factor 1 variables (Table 6). This association perhaps attributed to the relationship of As and Cu with potassic minerals. K-feldspar and/or clay minerals involvement on this factor seems to be likely though clay and Al both show insufficient loadings. Even though enrichment factor of Pb suggests a significant contribution from pollution (Table 5), this is not clearly seen from the results of factor analysis (Table 6). Lead contributes approximately 68% to Factor 1 (terrigenous input) and the remaining 25% of Pb is associated with As, Cu, and K in Factor 3 (Table 6). The association of As, Cu, and Pb seems to be contributed from modern sources (Figure 8), because all these trace elements show their maximum enrichment factors >2 (Table 5), implying that Factor 3 may represent modern sources for these elements in the study area (anthropogenic factor). Potassium association in this factor favors the idea that these elemental fractions from modern sources might be adsorbed on clay minerals (Figure 8), most probably on illite – {(K, H3O)(Al, Mg, Fe)2(Si, Al)4O10[(OH)2, H2O], with K content of 6.03%} – which is also one of the prominent clay minerals in the river sediments of Hainan Island (Hu et al., 2014). This inference is also corroborated with diverse contamination indices and factor analysis of seven trace elemental data in riverine bed sediments from the Hainan Island that indicated anthropogenically derived Pb (Zhao et al., 2015).

FIGURE 8
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Figure 8. Bi-plots of As vs. K, Cu vs. K, As vs. Cu, and Pb vs. K showing their relationships in fine and bulk fractions of surface sediments, off northwestern Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin.

Conclusion

Although spatial analyses of major and trace elements by depth and distance from the river yields no much information, six elements (Al, Fe, Cr, Ni, V, and Zn) spatially varied among four transects investigated in this study. Ratios of major elements to Al as well as the calculation of CIA and CIW suggest that the surface sediments off northwest coast of Hainan Island were derived mainly from physical erosion and/or chemical weathering of rocks (granite and basalt rocks) from the surrounding landmasses. Enrichment factors for trace metals with respect to average shale and UC-YC reference compositions reveal higher EFs (>2) for Pb, pointing that the sediments in the study area are slightly contaminated by Pb. A comparative study of concentrations of trace elements in coastal sediments of the Gulf of Tonkin with other coastal regions of eastern China revealed that most trace metals of present study are lower than the average values reported from other coastal regions of China. We demonstrate based on trace elemental data and subsequent normalization approach that the coastal regions of Gulf of Tonkin are still in pristine environmental condition compared with other coastal areas in East China, although Pb shows slight contamination with a mean EF >2. Factor analysis extracts three dominant geochemical associations: (1) terrigenous input association of Al, Mg, Na, Cr, Zn, Ni, V, and Pb; (2) heavy mineral, in particular ilmenite, association of Fe, Ti, and Cd; and (3) anthropogenic input of As, Cu, and Pb. Since the preliminary study undertaken here only provides a rough idea on the environmental status in the east coast of Gulf of Tonkin, more detailed geochemical work in the Gulf of Tonkin is needed to critically evaluate the influence of basaltic contribution to and contamination tendency of sediments in the Gulf of Tonkin.

Data Availability

All datasets generated for this study are included in the manuscript and/or the Supplementary Files.

Author Contributions

SK designed the study. DL, BL, SK, and WZ performed the field work. DL did lab work for his undergraduate thesis. J-YL carried out the grain size analysis. AZ, JZ, and XS carried out the geochemical analyses of major and trace elements. SK, BL, HW, and QL carried out the statistical analyses and all data interpretations. DL, SK, and BL wrote the manuscript with contributions from all authors.

Funding

This study was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41273083), Open Funds of the Tongji University (MGK1201), and the First Institute of Oceanography (MASEG201502 and MASEG201601), China.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

We appreciate the help from Zheng Liping and Xing Luru of the Institute of Deep-sea Science and Engineering, Sanya, during the sampling campaign in the Gulf of Tonkin. DL gratefully acknowledges the funding support from the Marine Science Base Project (2013C26-Research Training and Scientific Research Ability) for his undergraduate project work.

Supplementary Material

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2019.00363/full#supplementary-material

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Keywords: geochemistry, weathering, metal contamination, provenance, sediments, the Gulf of Tonkin

Citation: Liu D, Lin B, Kandasamy S, Wang H, Liu Q, Zou W, Zhu A, Zou J, Lou J-Y and Shi X (2019) Geochemical Appraisal of Chemical Weathering and Metal Contamination in Coastal Surface Sediments, Off Northwest Hainan Island, the Gulf of Tonkin. Front. Mar. Sci. 6:363. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2019.00363

Received: 07 March 2019; Accepted: 12 June 2019;
Published: 03 July 2019.

Edited by:

Rathinam Arthur James, Bharathidasan University, India

Reviewed by:

Chidambaram Sabarathinam, Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research, Kuwait
Prasanna Mohan Viswanathan, Curtin University, Malaysia

Copyright © 2019 Liu, Lin, Kandasamy, Wang, Liu, Zou, Zhu, Zou, Lou and Shi. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Selvaraj Kandasamy, selvaraj@xmu.edu.cn; kselva8@yahoo.com orcid.org/0000-0003-2916-5055

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