TY - JOUR AV - public JF - Marine Pollution Bulletin N2 - Black carbon (BC) and persistent organic pollutants (POPs) were analyzed from three sediment cores collected offshore in the East China Marginal Seas. The results showed steadily increasing or stable BC concentrations and fluxes. By contrast, time trends of POPs fluxes were consistent with historical records of commercial production and use in China. Although the POP inventories decreased significantly with increase in offshore distance, the relatively consistent trends for individual POPs in different sea areas confirmed that the main sources are derived from mainland China and that atmospheric input was an important contribution. POPs inventories decreased by 59?91 % during transport from the Yellow Sea to the remote East China Sea and deposition to the sediment. This suggests that the source signal for POPs may be preserved under stable depositional environments, even though only a fraction of those pollutants are buried in open sea sediments. PB - Elsevier BV VL - 181 TI - Deposition records of persistent organic pollutants and black carbon in dated sediment cores from China marginal seas: Implications for terrestrial sources and transport processes ID - discovery10151030 N1 - This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher's terms and conditions. A1 - Lin, Tian A1 - Han, Yizhen A1 - Wu, Zilan A1 - Hu, Limin A1 - Rose, Neil L A1 - Guo, Zhigang Y1 - 2022/08// UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.113874 KW - POPs KW - BC KW - Depositional fluxes KW - Inventory KW - Transport processes KW - East China marginal seas ER -