Occurrence, sources and risk of heavy metals in soil from a typical antimony mining area in Guizhou Province, China

被引:0
作者
Yuting Guo
Rongshan Wu
Changsheng Guo
Jiapei Lv
Linlin Wu
Jian Xu
机构
[1] Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences,State Key Laboratory of Environmental Criteria and Risk Assessment
[2] Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences,State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Ecological Effect and Risk Assessment of Chemicals
[3] Zhengzhou University,School of Ecology and Environment
来源
Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2023年 / 45卷
关键词
Heavy metals; Antimony mine; Principal component analysis; Risk assessment;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Antimony mining activities can result in serious contamination of soil by heavy metals, which represents a risk to human health. In this study, the contamination and sources of 14 heavy metals, and their risks to both ecosystem and public health from these metals at an antimony mining site in Guizhou Province in China were explored. The results showed that the mean concentrations of Hg, Cu, As, Se, Cd, Sn, Sb and Pb were 3.73, 2.49, 13.99, 38.32, 1.11, 1.61, 305.33, 1.59 times than their local background levels. Sb, Se, As and Hg presented the relatively heavy pollution, wherein Sb (EI = 2137.34 > 320), Hg (EI = 150.26 > 80) and As (EI = 139.92 > 80) also posed the strong ecological risk. The sources identification illustrated Hg, Pb, As, Bi, Cr, Sb, Cd and Zn were attributed to industrial activities, Ni, Co, Au and Cu (p < 0.01) were derived from a combination of a lithogeny origin and anthropogenic source, whereas Se was of natural origin. Health risk assessment demonstrated that Ni, Cr and As presented both the unacceptable noncarcinogenic and carcinogenic risk, and Sb (HI = 1.44E+03) and Cd (HI = 2.91E+00) posed unacceptable noncarcinogenic risk to the local resident. Furthermore, children in the 1–6 age group (HI = 7.83E+02) were more sensitive to noncarcinogenic risk, and the 6–18 age group (CRI = 2.39E−02) as more prone to carcinogenic risk. The dermal contact was the predominant exposure pathway of noncarcinogenic and carcinogenic risks with a contribution rate of over 97% for all age groups. Overall, this research provided the comprehensive information on heavy metals in an antimony mining sites, and the related heavy metals should be paid attention for ensuring soil safety and protecting local people’s health.
引用
收藏
页码:3637 / 3651
页数:14
相关论文
共 272 条
  • [1] Acosta JA(2011)Multivariate statistical and gis-based approach to evaluate heavy metals behavior in mine sites for future reclamation Journal of Geochemical Exploration 109 8-17
  • [2] Faz A(2020)Contamination, sources and risk assessments of metals in media from Anka artisanal gold mining area, Northwest Nigeria Science of the Total Environment 718 137235-941
  • [3] Martínez-Martínez S(2019)Carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic health risk assessment of heavy metals exposure from Shanono and Bagwai artisanal gold mines, Kano state Nigeria Scientific African 6 e00197-31391
  • [4] Zornoza R(2020)Arsenic exposure decreases adiposity during high-fat feeding Obesity 28 932-52
  • [5] Carmona DM(2021)Security regional division of farmland soil heavy metal elements in north of the north china plain Frontiers in Environmental Science 9 639460-309
  • [6] Kabas S(2019)Associations between mercury exposure and the risk of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in US adolescents Environmental Science and Pollution Research International 26 31384-274
  • [7] Adewumi AJ(2014)Overview of trace metals in the urban soil of 31 metropolises in China Journal of Geochemical Exploration 139 31-1001
  • [8] Laniyan TA(2018)Selenium distribution in the Chinese environment and its relationship with human health: A review Environment International 112 294-50
  • [9] Bello S(2006)Human exposure modelling for chemical risk assessment: A review of current approaches and research and policy implications Environmental Science & Policy 9 261-10
  • [10] Nasiru R(1980)An ecological risk index for aquatic pollution control A sedimentological approach Water Research 14 975-1982