Literature DB >> 9850600

The geochemistry of mercury in central Amazonian soils developed on the Alter-do-Chão formation of the lower Tapajós River Valley, Pará state, Brazil.

M Roulet1, M Lucotte, A Saint-Aubin, S Tran, I Rhéault, N Farella, E De Jesus Da silva, J Dezencourt, C J Sousa Passos, G Santos Soares, J R Guimarães, D Mergler, M Amorim.   

Abstract

In an oxisol-spodosol system developed on the terrestrial surface of the lower Tapajós Valley, the determination of total mercury (Hg), organic carbon (C), iron and aluminum oxy-hydroxide (Fe(cdb) and Al(cdb)) concentrations in the surface soil horizons are used to characterise the geochemical processes controlling the accumulation of Hg in soils under natural vegetation cover and in deforested and cultivated sites. Oxisols from the plateau have homogeneous and relatively high background Hg contents and burdens constituting an important natural reservoir of Hg for the region (90-210 ng/g dry wt. and 19-33 mg/m2 for the first 20 cm). The Fe(cdb) and Al(cdb) contents associated with the fine fraction (< 63 microns) of the soil suggest that oxy-hydroxides and, particularly Al-substituted Fe oxy-hydroxides, control the Hg concentrations observed in all of the soils of the study region. Consequently, the geochemistry of these minerals along the slopes governs the accumulation or the release of the Hg according to the natural evolution of the soil cover and/or following the degradation of soils by erosion after deforestation and cultivation. These observations have important implications for the interpretation of Hg contamination patterns observed in Amazonian aquatic systems that could be linked to different drainage sources of Hg from the terrestrial surface. The sandification and podzolisation that is characteristic of the evolution of numerous pedological systems in the equatorial Amazon could be responsible for exportation of the naturally accumulated Hg, as for other metals, by acidic complexation and migration to the black waters of the Amazon. In the central Amazon region, as a result of the fragility of the soil cover, deforestation and cultivation, affecting principally the superficial soil, promote the selective erosion of fine particles enriched in oxides and Hg. The erosion of soil could be responsible for an important release of Hg, transported in particulate form by drainage waters.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9850600     DOI: 10.1016/s0048-9697(98)00265-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  17 in total

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Authors:  Joniqua Howard; Maya A Trotz; Ken Thomas; Erlande Omisca; Hong Ting Chiu; Trina Halfhide; Fenda Akiwumi; Ryan Michael; Amy L Stuart
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Authors:  Renee M Gardner; Jennifer F Nyland; Ines A Silva; Ana Maria Ventura; Jose Maria de Souza; Ellen K Silbergeld
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4.  Quality of life and health perceptions among fish-eating communities of the brazilian Amazon: an ecosystem approach to well-being.

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5.  Unravelling motor behaviour hallmarks in intoxicated adolescents: methylmercury subtoxic-dose exposure and binge ethanol intake paradigm in rats.

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6.  Mercury content in agricultural soils (Vojvodina Province, Serbia).

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7.  Potential risks of natural mercury levels to wild predator fish in an Amazon reservoir.

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8.  Dynamics of (total and methyl) mercury in sediment, fish, and crocodiles in an Amazonian Lake and risk assessment of fish consumption to the local population.

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Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2020-01-08       Impact factor: 2.513

Review 9.  Hair mercury levels in Amazonian populations: spatial distribution and trends.

Authors:  Flavia L Barbieri; Jacques Gardon
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10.  Spatial and vertical distribution of mercury in upland forest soils across the northeastern United States.

Authors:  Justin B Richardson; Andrew J Friedland; Teresa R Engerbretson; James M Kaste; Brian P Jackson
Journal:  Environ Pollut       Date:  2013-07-31       Impact factor: 8.071

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