Assessment of the mobility, bioaccessibility, and ecological risk of Pb and Zn on a dirt road located in a former mining area-Ribeira Valley-Brazil.

Environ Monit Assess

Department of Geotechnical Engineering, São Carlos School of Engineering, University of São Paulo, 400 Trabalhador Sãocarlense Ave., São Carlos, SP, 13566-590, Brazil.

Published: January 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Inadequate transport of foundry slags during landfill construction led to contamination of a dirt road connecting Vila Mota and Adrianópolis with lead (Pb) and zinc (Zn).
  • Samples taken from the road revealed high concentrations of Pb (mean 1426.5 mg/kg) and Zn (mean 4964.8 mg/kg), with specific extraction methods indicating significant bioaccessibility of contaminants.
  • Risk assessment calculations showed very high contamination indices for both metals, particularly at the Deposit site, indicating potential health risks for residents due to ease of soil particle transport and inhalation.

Article Abstract

The inadequate transportation of foundry slags during the construction of a mining waste landfill accounted for the presence of slags in the dirt road that connects the working district of Vila Mota to the city of Adrianópolis. The objectives of this work were to assess the lead (Pb) and zinc (Zn) contamination of the dirt. Three samples separated by 2 km were collected along a dirt road (samples: Adrianópolis, Deposit, and Plant). The conducted assays were physico-chemical parameters, pseudototal concentration, three sequential extraction procedures, and bioaccessibility assay. The laboratory data was used as input in the calculation of contamination indices risk assessment code (RAC) and potential ecological risk (Er). The dirt road presented high concentrations of Pb (mean 1426.5 mg kg) and Zn (mean 4964.8 mg kg). The BCR SEP (Bureau Community of Reference Sequential Extraction Procedure) method was more adequate in extracting the soluble-exchangeable fraction, and this fraction was correlated with the gastric phase. The bioaccessible fraction is mainly present in the stomach fraction and is transported to the intestinal phase. Using BCR SEP method to calculate the contamination indices, sample Deposit yielded very high risk when calculating RAC and Er for Pb (72.9% and 639.5, respectively). For Zn, high risk was obtained with RAC and very high risk for Er (42.5% and 344.2, respectively). The high content of Pb and Zn on the dirt road presents a risk to the population that uses this road, since the soil particles are easily transported, deposited on the dermis, and inhaled.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-019-7238-1DOI Listing

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