Temporal and Spatial Monitoring of the pH and Heavy Metals in a Soil Polluted by Mine Spill. Post Cleaning Effects
Autor: | Karl Vanderlinden, Pedro González Fernández, Rafaela Manuela Ordóñez Fernández, Rosa M. Carbonell Bojollo, Juan Vicente Giráldez Cervera |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Environmental Engineering
Ecological Modeling Environmental engineering Acid mine drainage complex mixtures Pollution Tailings Soil contamination Environmental chemistry Soil water Environmental Chemistry Soil horizon Environmental science Leaching (agriculture) Surface runoff Groundwater Water Science and Technology |
Zdroj: | Water, Air, and Soil Pollution. 178:229-243 |
ISSN: | 1573-2932 0049-6979 |
Popis: | The bursting of the mining dam of Aznalcollar (Seville, Spain) triggered an increase in the concentration of heavy metals in the soils of the river Guadiamar valley as a result of the leaching of the pyritic sludge deposited on them. After the cleaning operations which included, as well as mechanical clearing, the addition of different amendments, some areas with residual sludge remained, from which some heavy metals are being mobilized by the cyclical recharge and discharge processes of water in the profiles. This paper analyzes the effect of the soil recovery operations and the climatology on the concentration of metals and their distribution in the soil profile in an area affected by the toxic spill. Fourteen points have been selected in a plot in which acidity persists, there is no vegetation, and residual sludge stains can be seen at a glance. The temporal and spatial evolution of the extractable metals: Fe, Cu, Mn and Zn, the pH and the oxidable fraction has been measured in-depth. The results obtained up to now indicate a leaching of the pollutant towards deeper horizons, finding, at a depth of 757 cm, pH values of 3.5 and very high Fe and Mn concentrations available, especially in the profiles with large sized pores, with a big fraction of sand. On the surface, seasonally, there are low pH values of around 2.5 and extractable Fe contents of over 4000 ppm, which might have an influence on the quality of surface runoff or underground water. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |