| Literature DB >> 33881674 |
V Rimondi1,2, P Costagliola3,4, P Lattanzi4, T Catelani5, S Fornasaro3, D Medas6, G Morelli4, M Paolieri3.
Abstract
Thermal waters near the city of Viterbo (Central Italy) are known to show high As contents (up to 600 µg/l). Travertine is precipitated by these waters, forming extended plateau. In this study, we determine the As content, speciation and bioaccessibility in soil and travertine samples collected near a recreational area highly frequented by local inhabitants and tourists to investigate the risk of As exposure through accidental ingestion of soil particles. (Pseudo)total contents in the studied soils range from 17 to 528 mg/kg, being higher in soil developed on a travertine substrate (197 ± 127 mg/kg) than on volcanic rocks (37 ± 13 mg/kg). In travertines, most As is bound to the carbonatic fraction, whereas in soil the semimetal is mostly associated with the oxide and residual fractions. Accordingly, bioaccessibility (defined here by the simplified bioaccessibility extraction test, SBET; Oomen et al., 2002.) is maximum (up to 139 mg/kg) for soil developed on a travertine substrate, indicating a control of calcite dissolution on As bioaccessibility. On the other hand, risk analysis suggests a moderate carcinogenic risk associated with accidental soil ingestion, while dermal contact is negligible. By contrast, ingestion of thermal water implies a higher carcinogenic and systemic health risk.Entities:
Keywords: Arsenic; Bioaccessibility; Calcite; Geogenic; Soil ingestions; Thermal springs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33881674 PMCID: PMC8858286 DOI: 10.1007/s10653-021-00914-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Geochem Health ISSN: 0269-4042 Impact factor: 4.609
Fig. 1a Geological map of the Viterbo area and location of samples; the dash-point circled area is enlarged in b; b detailed map of thermal hot-spring sites of Piscine Carletti and Bullicame
Arsenic contents (mg/kg) of the investigated soils and travertines
| Sample ID | Sample type | Location | AsT-2000 | AsT-250 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| soilVT1 | Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 323 | nd |
| Trav soil | Agricultural area | 495 | 569 | |
| soilVT3 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 321 | nd |
| soilVT4 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 81 | nd |
| BLS 1 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 47 | nd |
| BLS 2 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 90 | nd |
| BLS 3 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 42 | nd |
| soilVTB1 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 195 | nd |
| soilVTB2 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 58 | nd |
| soilVTB3 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 132 | nd |
| Trav soil | Agricultural area | 130 | 104 | |
| soilVTB5 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 119 | nd |
| AS3 | Trav soil | Agricultural area | 255a | nd |
| Trav soil | Agricultural area | 528 | 512 | |
| Trav soil | Agricultural area | 420 | 518 | |
| Trav soil | Bullicame | 150a | 135 | |
| Trav soil | Bullicame | 152 | 158 | |
| Trav soil | Bullicame | 166a | 151 | |
| Trav soil | Bullicame | 141 | 124 | |
| Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 164 | 169 | |
| Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 246 | 252 | |
| Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 211 | 224 | |
| Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 186 | 182 | |
| Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 173 | 166 | |
| Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 155 | 147 | |
| D11 | Trav soil | Piscine Carletti | 152 | nd |
| BLS4 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 56a | nd |
| BLS5 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 30 | nd |
| BLS6 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 32 | nd |
| BLS7 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 17a | nd |
| AS1 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 26 | nd |
| AS2 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 36 | nd |
| AS4 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 24 | nd |
| AS5 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 53 | nd |
| AS6 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 48 | nd |
| AS9 | Vulc soil | Agricultural area | 43 | nd |
| ZIT1 | New-form trav | Le Zitelle | 73 | nd |
| BL1 | New-form trav | Bullicame | 154 | nd |
| BL2 | New-form trav | Bullicame | 206 | nd |
| BL3 | New-form trav | Bullicame | 201 | nd |
| BL4 | Fossil trav | Bullicame | 160 | nd |
| BL5 | Fossil trav | Bullicame | 186a | nd |
| BL7 | Fossil trav | Bullicame | 123 | nd |
| VT1s | New-form trav | Piscine Carletti | 130 | nd |
| VT2s | New-form trav | Piscine Carletti | 80 | nd |
| VT3s | Fossil trav | Piscine Carletti | 195 | nd |
| VT4s | New-form trav | Piscine Carletti | 164 | nd |
| VT5s | New-form trav | Piscine Carletti | 148 | nd |
| VT6s | New-form trav | Piscine Carletti | 168 | nd |
| VT7s | Fossil trav | Piscine Carletti | 50 | nd |
| VT8s | Fossil trav | Piscine Carletti | 39 | nd |
| VT9s | Fossil trav | Piscine Carletti | 276 | nd |
| VT10s | New-form trav | Piscine Carletti | 125 | nd |
aMean of triplicate analysis; reproducibility < 4 mg/kg As
Underlined samples are those investigated for SBET
nd stands for not determined
Summary of the sequential chemical extraction procedures (A and A*) employed in this study
| Fractions | Extractant | Extractions conditions | SSR** | Behavioral classes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scheme A | Scheme A* | ||||
| ASO4 | ASO4* | 0.05 mol/L (NH4)2SO4 | 4 h shaking, 25 °C | 1:25 | Non-specifically sorbed |
| APO4 | APO4* | 0.05 mol/L (NH4)2PO4 | 16 h shaking, 25 °C | 1:25 | Specifically sorbed |
| ACARB | ACARB* | 40 ml of 1 mol/l sodium acetate/acetic acid buffer; pH 5 | 12 h shaking, 25 °C | 1:25 | As bound to carbonates |
| AOX | nd | 0.2 mol/L NH4-oxalate buffer; pH 3.25 | 4 h shaking in the dark, 25 °C | 1:25 | As bound to amorphous Fe oxides |
| AOX+C | nd | 0.2 mol/L NH4-oxalate buffer + 0.1 M ascorbic acid; pH 3.25 | 30 min in a sand basin at 96 °C | 1:25 | As bound to crystalline Fe oxides |
| AAR | AAR* | aqua regia; HCl/HNO3 3:1 | 3 h in sand bath, 50 °C for scheme A; microwave assisted for scheme A* | 1:20 | Residual |
**Solid-to-liquid ratio
The sum of As extracted from AOX to AAR () of the scheme A is comparable to AAR* of the scheme A* (nd stands for not determined)
Summary of the parameters employed for the ADD and LADD (mg/kg day) calculation for soil ingestion, soil dermal, water ingestion and water dermal exposure scenarios
| Parameters | Symbol | Units | Values | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children | Adults | ||||
| Element concentration in water | CS | mg/kg | site-specific | This study | |
| Ingestion rate of soil (US EPA)* | IRS | mg/day | 40 | 10 | US EPA (2017) |
| Exposure frequency | EF | days/year | 100 | This study | |
| Exposure duration | ED | years | 6 | 30 | US EPA ( |
| Body weight | BW | kg | 15 | 70 | US EPA ( |
| Averaging time (non-cancerogenic) | ATNC | days | 2190 | 10,950 | US EPA ( |
| Averaging time (carcinogenic) | ATC | days | 25,550 | US EPA ( | |
| Conversion factor | CF | kg/mg | 1.00E-06 | US EPA ( | |
*Includes soil and outdoor settled dust
**Considered total body
***For swimming
****Reasonable maximum exposure during a swimming scenario
Arsenic contents (mg/kg) extracted from SEC steps on soils and travertines
| Sample type | Sample ID | ASO4- (ASO4*) | APO4 (APO4*) | ACARB (ACARB*) | AOX | AOX+C | AAR (AAR*) | AOX-ARSUM | ΣAsSEC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mg/kg | |||||||||
| New-forming travertine | VT1s | 15 | 13 | 128 | 2 | <DL | <DL | 2 | 158 |
| VT6s | 4 | 17 | 162 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 186 | |
| Fossil travertine | VT7s | 2 | 8 | 35 | 10 | 1 | <DL | 11 | 56 |
| VT9s | 8 | 27 | 101 | 111 | 54 | 4 | 169 | 305 | |
| Travertine soil | D03 | 2 | 10 | 141 | nd | nd | 8 | nd | 161 |
| D06 | 3 | 14 | 18 | nd | nd | 218 | nd | 252 | |
| D07 | 3 | 18 | 15 | nd | nd | 166 | nd | 202 | |
| soilVT1 | 2 | 46 | 15 | 138 | 133 | 81 | 352 | 415 | |
| soilVT2 | 2 | 45 | 11 | nd | nd | 442 | nd | 499 | |
| soilVTB4 | 2 | 25 | 10 | nd | nd | 82 | nd | 119 | |
| AS7 | 2 | 46 | 12 | nd | nd | 483 | nd | 543 | |
| AS10 | 2 | 34 | 14 | nd | nd | 301 | nd | 351 | |
| soilVT3 | 2 | 38 | 5 | 120 | 176 | 16 | 312 | 357 | |
| soilVT4 | 2 | 7 | 19 | 31 | 20 | 75 | 126 | 154 | |
nd stands for not determined
Fig. 2Bar chart of extracted As (mg/kg) during SBET (AsSBET), and relative bioaccessible As (RBA, %) values (numbers and asterisks in red)
Fig. 3Percentages (normalized to 100% of extraction) of extracted As by SEC
Fig. 4Bivariate plot showing (pseudo) total As in the 250 µm fraction (AsT-250, mg/kg) and absolute bioaccessible As (AsSBET, mg/kg)
Results of the computed hazard quotient (HQ) and cancer risk (CRskin) for different age groups and exposure pathways with respect to thermal water and soil
| Sample type | Exposure pathway | HQ | CRskin | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children | Adults | Children | Adults | ||||||
| Thermal water | Ingestion | (99%) | (88%) | (97%) | |||||
| Dermal contact | 3.7E−03 | (0%) | 2.1E−03 | (0%) | 1.4E−07 | (0%) | 1.4E−07 | (0%) | |
| Soil | Ingestion (min–max) | 5.8E−02 | (12%) | 3.1E−03 | (1%) | 2.3E−06 | (12%) | 2.7E−06 | (3%) |
| 3.3E−01 | 1.8E−02 | ||||||||
| Dermal contact (min–max) | 2.2E−03 | (0%) | 8.0E−05 | (0%) | 8.4E−08 | (0%) | 1.2E−08 | (0%) | |
| 1.2E−02 | 4.4E−04 | 4.6E−07 | 6.7E−08 | ||||||
| HQTOT | – | – | |||||||
| CRskin,TOT | – | – | |||||||
Double underlined numbers identify high carcinogenic and/or systemic risk (CRskin > 1 × 10−4 or HQ > 1), while single underlined numbers indicate situation with moderate risk (CRskin > 1 × 10−5). Percentages refer to the contribution of the exposure risk (HQ or CR) due to a single pathway scenario with respect to the total (HQTOT, CRskin, TOT)