Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T02:22:54.419Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Linkage between solid-phase apportionment and bioaccessible arsenic, chromium and lead in soil from Glasgow, Scotland, UK

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 November 2018

Joanna Wragg*
Affiliation:
British Geological Survey, Environmental Science Centre, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG, UK. Email: [email protected]
Andrew Broadway
Affiliation:
School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JN, UK.
Mark R. Cave
Affiliation:
British Geological Survey, Environmental Science Centre, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG, UK. Email: [email protected]
Fiona M. Fordyce
Affiliation:
British Geological Survey, The Lyell Centre, Research Avenue South, Edinburgh EH14 4AP, UK.
Barbara Palumbo-Roe
Affiliation:
British Geological Survey, Environmental Science Centre, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG, UK. Email: [email protected]
Darren J. Beriro
Affiliation:
British Geological Survey, Environmental Science Centre, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG, UK. Email: [email protected]
John G. Farmer
Affiliation:
School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JN, UK.
Margaret C. Graham
Affiliation:
School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JN, UK.
Bryne T. Ngwenya
Affiliation:
School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JN, UK.
Richard J. F. Bewley
Affiliation:
URS Corporation Ltd, Manchester M1 6HS, UK.
*
*Corresponding author

Abstract

The chemical composition of soil from the Glasgow (UK) urban area was used to identify the controls on the availability of potentially harmful elements (PHEs) in soil to humans. Total and bioaccessible concentrations of arsenic (As), chromium (Cr) and lead (Pb) in 27 soil samples, collected from different land uses, were coupled to information on their solid-phase partitioning derived from sequential extraction data. The total element concentrations in the soils were in the range <0.1–135mgkg–1 for As; 65–3680mgkg–1 for Cr and 126–2160mgkg–1 for Pb, with bioaccessible concentrations averaging 27, 5 and 27% of the total values, respectively. Land use does not appear to be a predictor of contamination; however, the history of the contamination is critically important. The Chemometric Identification of Substrates and Element Distribution (CISED) sequential chemical extraction and associated self-modelling mixture resolution analysis identified three sample groupings and 16 geochemically distinct phases (substrates). These were related to iron (n=3), aluminium–silicon (Al–Si; n=2), calcium (n=3), phosphorus (n=1), magnesium (Mg; n=3), manganese (n=1) and easily extractable (n=3), which was predominantly made up of sodium and sulphur. As, Cr and Pb were respectively found in 9, 10 and 12 of the identified phases, with bioaccessible As predominantly associated with easily extractable phases, bioaccessible Cr with the Mg-dominated phases and bioaccessible Pb with both the Mg-dominated and Al–Si phases. Using a combination of the Unified Barge Method to measure the bioaccessibility of PHEs and CISED to identify the geochemical sources has allowed a much better understanding of the complexity of PHE mobility in the Glasgow urban environment. This approach can be applied to other urban environments and cases of soil contamination, and made part of land-use planning.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British Geological Survey UKRI 2018 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

6. References

Ajmone-Marsan, F., Biasioli, M., Kralj, T., Grčman, H., Davidson, C. M., Hursthouse, A. S., Madrid, L. & Rodrigues, S. 2008. Metals in particle-size fractions of the soils of five European cities. Environmental Pollution 152, 7381.Google Scholar
Appleton, J. D., Cave, M. R. & Wragg, J. 2012a. Anthropogenic and geogenic impacts on arsenic bioaccessibility in UK topsoils. Science of the Total Environment 435, 2129.Google Scholar
Appleton, J. D., Cave, M. R. & Wragg, J. 2012b. Modelling lead bioaccessibility in urban topsoils based on data from Glasgow, London, Northampton and Swansea, UK. Environmental Pollution 171, 265272.Google Scholar
Appleton, J. D., Cave, M. R., Palumbo-Roe, B. & Wragg, J. 2013. Lead bioaccessibility in topsoils from lead mineralisation and urban domains, UK. Environmental Pollution 178, 278287.Google Scholar
ATSDR. 2012. Toxicological Profile for Chromium. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp7.pdf.Google Scholar
Bacon, J. R. & Davidson, C. M. 2008. Is there a future for sequential chemical extraction? The Analyst 133, 2546.Google Scholar
Bewley, R. J. F., Jeffries, R., Watson, S. & Granger, D. 2001. An overview of chromium contamination issues in the South-East of Glasgow and the potential for remediation. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 23, 267271.Google Scholar
Broadway, A. 2008. Development of methodologies for determination of the human bioaccessibility of chromium and other elements in Glasgow soil. Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Broadway, A., Cave, M. R., Wragg, J., Fordyce, F. M., Bewley, R. J. F., Graham, M. C., Ngwenya, B. T. & Farmer, J. G. 2010. Determination of the bioaccessibility of chromium in Glasgow soil and the implications for human health risk assessment. Science of the Total Environment 409, 267277.Google Scholar
Cave, M. R. 2008. The use of self modelling mixture resolution methods for the interpretation of geochemical data sets. British Geological Survey IR/08/035.Google Scholar
Cave, M. R., Milodowski, A. E. & Friel, E. N. 2004. Evaluation of a method for identification of host physico-chemical phases for trace metals and measurement of their solid-phase partitioning in soil samples by nitric acid extraction and chemometric mixture resolution. Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis 4, 7186.Google Scholar
Cave, M. R., Wragg, J., Gowing, C. & Gardner, A. 2015. Measuring the solid-phase fractionation of lead in urban and rural soils using a combination of geochemical survey data and chemical extractions. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 37(4), 779790.Google Scholar
Chen, C.-L., Chiou, H.-Y., Hsu, L.-I., Hsueh, Y.-M., Wu, M.-M. & Chen, C.-J. 2010. Ingested arsenic, characteristics of well water consumption and risk of different histological types of lung cancer in northeastern Taiwan. Environmental Research 110, 455462.Google Scholar
CIEH. 2009. Professional practice note: reviewing human health risk assessment reports invoking contaminant oral bioavailability measurements or estimates. http://www.iaeg.info/portals/0/Content/Commissions/Comm20/CIEH_PPN_Bioavailability_Final_June09.pdf.Google Scholar
Cox, S., Chelliah, M. M., McKinley, J., Palmer, S., Ofterdinger, U., Young, M., Cave, M. R. & Wragg, J. 2013. The importance of solid-phase distribution on the oral bioaccessibility of Ni and Cr in soils overlying Palaeogene basalt lavas, Northern Ireland. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 35(5), 553567.Google Scholar
Davidson, C. M., Urquhart, G. J., Ajmone-Marsan, F., Biasioli, M., da Costa Duarte, A., Díaz-Barrientos, E., Grčman, H., Hossack, I., Hursthouse, A. S., Madrid, L., Rodrigues, S. & Zupan, M. 2006. Fractionation of potentially toxic elements in urban soils from five European cities by means of a harmonised sequential extraction procedure. Analytica Chimica Acta 565, 6372.Google Scholar
DEFRA. 2014. Development of Category 4 Screening Levels for Assessment of Land Affected by Contamination. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Policy Companion Document SP1010 (London).Google Scholar
Denys, S., Caboche, J., Tack, K., Rychen, G., Wragg, J., Cave, M. R., Jondreville, C. & Feidt, C. 2012. In vivo validation of the unified BARGE method to assess the bioaccessibility of arsenic, antimony, cadmium, and lead in soils. Environmental Science & Technology 46, 62526260.Google Scholar
Environment Agency. 2004. Model procedures for the management of land contamination, CLR 11. Bristol: Environment Agency.Google Scholar
Environment Agency. 2009a. Contaminated land exposure assessment soil guideline values. Bristol: Environment Agency.Google Scholar
Environment agency. 2009b. Updated technical background to the CLEA model. Environment Agency (England and Wales), SC050021/SR3 (Bristol). http://publications.environment-agency.gov.uk/pdf/SCHO0508BNQW-e-e.pdf.Google Scholar
Farmer, J. G., Graham, M. C., Thomas, R. P., Licona-Manzur, C., Paterson, E., Campbell, C. D., Geelhoed, J. S., Lumsdon, D. G., Meeussen, J. C. L., Roe, M. J., Conner, A., Fallick, A. E. & Bewley, R. J. F. 1999. Assessment and modelling of the environmental chemistry and potential for remediative treatment of chromium-contaminated land. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 21, 331337.Google Scholar
Farmer, J. G., Broadway, A., Cave, M. R., Wragg, J., Fordyce, F. M., Graham, M. C., Ngwenya, B. T. & Bewley, R. J. F. 2011. A lead isotopic study of the human bioaccessibility of lead in urban soils from Glasgow, Scotland. Science of the Total Environment 409, 49584965.Google Scholar
Farmer, J. G. & Jarvis, R. 2009. Strategies for improving human health in contaminated situations: a review of past, present and possible future approaches. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 31, 227238.10.1007/s10653-008-9209-2Google Scholar
Farmer, J. G. & Lyon, T. D. B. 1977. Lead in Glasgow street dirt and soul. Science of the Total Environment 8, 8993.Google Scholar
Fordyce, F. M., Brown, S. E., Ander, E. L., Rawlins, B. G., O'Donnell, K. E., Lister, T. R., Breward, N. & Johnson, C. C. 2005. GSUE: urban geochemical mapping in Great Britain. Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis 5, 325336.Google Scholar
Fordyce, F. M., Nice, S. E., Lister, T. R., Dochartaigh, B. O. E., Cooper, R., Allen, M., Ingham, M., Gowing, C., Vickers, B. P. & Scheib, A. 2012. Urban Soil Geochemistry of Glasgow – Main Report. Land Use Planning and Development Programme Open Report OR/08/002. British Geological Survey, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Fordyce, F. M., Everett, P. A., Bearcock, J. M. & Lister, T. R. 2018. Soil metal/metalloid concentrations in the Clyde Basin, Scotland, UK: implications for land quality. Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. DOI: 10.1017/S1755691018000282.Google Scholar
Gal, J., Hursthouse, A. S. & Cuthbert, S. J. 2006. Chemical availability of arsenic and antimony in industrial soils. Environmental Chemistry Letters 3, 149153.Google Scholar
Gal, J., Hursthouse, A. & Cuthbert, S. 2007. Bioavailability of arsenic and antimony in soils from an abandoned mining area, Glendinning (SW Scotland). Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A 42, 12631274.Google Scholar
Giacomino, A., Abollino, O., Malandrino, M. & Mentasti, E. 2011. The role of chemometrics in single and sequential extraction assays: a Review. Part II. Cluster analysis, multiple linear regression, mixture resolution, experimental design and other techniques. Analytica Chimica Acta 688, 122139.Google Scholar
Gibson, M. J. & Farmer, J. G. 1983 A survey of trace metal contamination in Glasgow urban soils. Heavy Metals in the Environment 2, 11411144.Google Scholar
Gibson, M. J. & Farmer, J. G. 1986. Multi-step sequential chemical extraction of heavy metals from urban soils. Environmental Pollution Series B, Chemical and Physical 11, 117135.Google Scholar
Johnson, C. C., Demetriades, A., Locutura, J. & Ottesen, R. T. 2011. Mapping the chemical environment of urban areas. Oxford: Wiley.Google Scholar
Madrid, L., Diaz-Barrientos, E., Ruiz-Cortes, E., Reinoso, R., Biasioli, M., Davidson, C. M., Duarte, A. C., Grcman, H., Hossack, I., Hursthouse, A. S., Kralj, T., Ljung, K., Otabbong, E., Rodrigues, S., Urquhart, G. J. & Ajmone-Marsan, F. 2006. Variability in concentrations of potentially toxic elements in urban parks from six European cities. Journal of Environmental Monitoring 8, 11581165.Google Scholar
Nathanail, P., McCaffrey, C., Earl, N., Foster, N. D., Gillett, A. G. & Ogden, R. 2005. A deterministic method for deriving site-specific human health assessment criteria for contaminants in soil. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment 11, 389410.Google Scholar
National Records Scotland. 2016. Glasgow City Council Area – demographic factsheet. https://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/files/statistics/council-area-data-sheets/glasgow-city-factsheet.pdfGoogle Scholar
Okorie, A., Entwistle, J. & Dean, J. R. 2011. The application of in vitro gastrointestinal extraction to assess oral bioaccessibility of potentially toxic elements from an urban recreational site. Applied Geochemistry 26, 789796.Google Scholar
Palumbo-Roe, B., Cave, M. R., Klinck, B. A., Wragg, J., Taylor, H., O'Donnell, K. & Shaw, R. A. 2005. Bioaccessibility of arsenic in soils developed over Jurassic ironstones in eastern England. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 27, 121130.Google Scholar
Paterson, E. 2011. Geochemical atlas for Scottish topsoils. Aberdeen: Macauley Land Use Research Institute.Google Scholar
Pelfrene, A., Waterlot, C., Mazzuca, M., Nisse, C., Bidar, G. & Francis, D. 2011. Assessing Cd, Pb, Zn human bioaccessibility in smelter contaminated agricultural topsoils (northern France). Environmental Geochemistry and Health 33, 477493.Google Scholar
Pfeifer, H., Gueye-Girardet, A., Reymond, D., Schlegel, C., Temgoua, E., Hesterberg, D. L. & Weiqing Chou, J. 2004. Dispersion of natural arsenic in the Malcantone watershed, Southern Switzerland: field evidence for repeated sorption–desorption and oxidation–reduction processes. Geoderma 122, 205234.Google Scholar
R Core Team. 2016. A language and environment for statistical computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. https://www.R-project.org/.Google Scholar
Reis, A. P., Patinha, C., Wragg, J., Dias, A. C., Cave, M. R., Sousa, A. J., Batista, M. J., Prazeres, C., Costa, C., Ferreira da Silva, E. & Rocha, F. 2014. Urban geochemistry of lead in gardens, playgrounds and schoolyards of Lisbon, Portugal: assessing exposure and risk to human health. Applied Geochemistry 44, 4553.Google Scholar
Roussel, H., Waterlot, C., Pelfrene, A., Pruvot, C., Mazzuca, M. & Douay, F. 2010. Cd, Pb and Zn oral bioaccessibility of urban soils contaminated in the past by atmospheric emissions from two lead and zinc smelters. Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 58, 945954.Google Scholar
Sharma, K., Basta, N. T. & Grewal, P. S. 2015. Soil heavy metal contamination in residential neighborhoods in post-industrial cities and its potential human exposure risk. Urban Ecosystems 18, 115132.Google Scholar
Sialelli, J., Urquhart, G. J., Davidson, C. M. & Hursthouse, A. S. 2010. Use of a physiologically based extraction test to estimate the human bioaccessibility of potentially toxic elements in urban soils from the city of Glasgow, UK. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 32, 517527.Google Scholar
Stockburger, D. W. 2001. Introductory statistics: concepts, models and applications. Cincinnati, OH: Missouri State University Ohio, Atomic Dog Publishing.Google Scholar
USEPA. 1995. Method 3052: microwave assisted acid digestion of siliceous and organically based matrices. Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, United States Environmental Protection Agency.Google Scholar
Wragg, J., Cave, M. R. & Gregory, S. 2007. A study of the relationship between arsenic, bioaccessibility of arsenic, chromium, and nickel in natural ironstone soils in the UK. Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A 42, 13031315.Google Scholar
Wragg, J., Cave, M. R., Basta, N., Brandon, E., Casteel, S., Denys, S., Gron, C., Oomen, A., Reimer, K., Tack, K. & Van de Wiele, T. 2011. An inter-laboratory trial of the unified BARGE bioaccessibility method for arsenic, cadmium and lead in soil. Science of the Total Environment 409, 40164030.Google Scholar
Wragg, J., Cave, M. R. & Gregory, S. 2014. The solid phase distribution and bioaccessibility of arsenic, chromium, and nickel in natural ironstone soils in the UK. Applied and Environmental Soil Science 2014, 12.Google Scholar
Wragg, J. & Cave, M. R. 2012. Assessment of a geochemical extraction procedure to determine the solid phase fractionation and bioaccessibility of potentially harmful elements in soils: a case study using the NIST 2710 reference soil. Analytica Chimica Acta 722, 4354.Google Scholar
Wright, J. P., Dietrich, K. N., Ris, M. D., Hornung, R. W., Wessel, S. D., Lanphear, B. P., Ho, M. & Rae, M. N. 2008. Association of prenatal and childhood blood lead concentrations with criminal arrests in early adulthood. PLoS Medicine 5(5), e101, 732740.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Wragg et al. supplementary material

Wragg et al. supplementary material 1

Download Wragg et al. supplementary material(File)
File 25.3 KB