Systematic Review of Metallic, Industrial, and Pharmaceutical Emerging Contaminants in Snow and Ice: A Global Perspective from Polar and High-Mountain Regions
Azzurra Spagnesi, Andrea Gambaro, Elena Barbaro, Jacopo Gabrieli, Carlo Barbante

TL;DR
This paper reviews how pollutants like metals, industrial chemicals, and pharmaceuticals accumulate in snow and ice in cold regions, highlighting their environmental risks and knowledge gaps.
Contribution
The study provides the first systematic review integrating multiple contaminant classes in polar and alpine snow and ice, using standardized data synthesis.
Findings
Emerging contaminants are widely detected in the global cryosphere, with spatial patterns influenced by emissions and transport.
Climate change is expected to increase the release of these contaminants as snow and ice melt.
Geographical and analytical inconsistencies limit current understanding and monitoring efforts.
Abstract
Emerging contaminants (ECs) comprise diverse pollutant classes that are increasingly detected in remote environments due to their persistence and long-range transport potential. In cold regions, atmospheric cold-trapping processes favour their accumulation in high-altitude and high-latitude snow and ice, which act as sensitive archives and secondary sources of contamination. While previous studies have addressed individual environmental compartments (e.g., snowpack, glacier ice, meltwater), focusing on specific contaminant classes, a systematic review integrating the occurrence, behaviour and impacts of major EC groups in polar and alpine snow and ice is still lacking. To fill this gap, this work synthesised current knowledge on the environmental fate of three key EC categories in the cryosphere: metals and metalloids (MMs), industrial chemicals and by-products (ICBs), and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolar Research and Ecology · Toxic Organic Pollutants Impact · Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
