Publications by authors named "M Cerda-Domenech"

The dumping of an estimated amount of 57 million tons of hazardous sulfide mine waste from 1957 to 1990 into Portmán's Bay (SE Spain) caused one of the most severe cases of persistent anthropogenic impact in Europe's costal and marine environments. The resulting mine tailings deposit completely infilled Portmán's Bay and extended seawards on the continental shelf, bearing high levels of metals and As. The present work, where Synchrotron XAS, XRF core scanner and other data are combined, reveals the simultaneous presence of arsenopyrite (FeAsS), scorodite (FeAsO₄·2H₂O), orpiment (AsS) and realgar (AsS) in the submarine extension of the mine tailings deposit.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Plastics in marine environments serve as surfaces for bacterial biofilms, allowing the attachment and transport of faecal microorganisms and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs).
  • A study analyzed plastics collected from coastal areas influenced by human waste, finding marine bacteria, specifically Vibrio spp., on the plastics, along with detectable levels of E. coli and Enterococci.
  • The research revealed that while floating plastics had low but significant concentrations of faecal bacteria, sediment plastics showed even lower levels, indicating that plastics can harbor harmful pathogens and contribute to their spread in marine ecosystems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mining activities are essential to our society, but ore extraction and treatment produce waste that must be stored in safe places without harm to the environment. For a long time, seafloor disposal has been viewed as a cheap option with barely visible impacts. In Portmán Bay, SE of Spain, large amounts of tailings from open pit sulphide mining were discharged directly into the coastal sea over 33 years, thus forming a massive deposit that completely infilled the bay and expanded seawards over the inner continental shelf.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

X-ray fluorescence core scanners (XRF-CS) allow rapid, non-destructive, continuous and high-resolution analyses of the elemental composition of sediment cores, providing large sets of semi-quantitative data. These data can be converted to quantitative data through the linear regression approach using a relatively small number of discrete samples analyzed by techniques providing absolute concentrations. However, a precise characterization of the errors associated with the linear function is required to evaluate the quality of the calibrated element concentrations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mining impacts on coastal environments have been extensively studied around the world. However, the role of Submarine Groundwater Discharge (SGD) and Porewater Exchange (PEX) as pathways for pollutants from mining waste deposits into seawater has been largely overlooked. Portmán Bay is located in the Cartagena-La Unión Pb-Zn sulphur mining district in Murcia, SE of Spain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF