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Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana)

We studied the dust fractions of the smelting slag, mine tailings, and soil from the former Ni‐Cu mining and processing district in Selebi‐Phikwe (eastern Botswana). Multi‐method chemical and mineralogical investigations were combined with oral bioaccessibility testing of the fine dust fractions (&l...

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Autores principales: Ettler, Vojtěch, Hladíková, Karolína, Mihaljevič, Martin, Drahota, Petr, Culka, Adam, Jedlicka, Radim, Kříbek, Bohdan, Vaněk, Aleš, Penížek, Vít, Sracek, Ondra, Bagai, Zibisani
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9636585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36348990
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022GH000683
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author Ettler, Vojtěch
Hladíková, Karolína
Mihaljevič, Martin
Drahota, Petr
Culka, Adam
Jedlicka, Radim
Kříbek, Bohdan
Vaněk, Aleš
Penížek, Vít
Sracek, Ondra
Bagai, Zibisani
author_facet Ettler, Vojtěch
Hladíková, Karolína
Mihaljevič, Martin
Drahota, Petr
Culka, Adam
Jedlicka, Radim
Kříbek, Bohdan
Vaněk, Aleš
Penížek, Vít
Sracek, Ondra
Bagai, Zibisani
author_sort Ettler, Vojtěch
collection PubMed
description We studied the dust fractions of the smelting slag, mine tailings, and soil from the former Ni‐Cu mining and processing district in Selebi‐Phikwe (eastern Botswana). Multi‐method chemical and mineralogical investigations were combined with oral bioaccessibility testing of the fine dust fractions (<48  and <10 μm) in a simulated gastric fluid to assess the potential risk of the intake of metal(loid)s contaminants. The total concentrations of the major contaminants varied significantly (Cu: 301–9,600 mg/kg, Ni: 850–7,000 mg/kg, Co: 48–791 mg/kg) but were generally higher in the finer dust fractions. The highest bioaccessible concentrations of Co, Cu, and Ni were found in the slag and mine tailing dusts, where these metals were mostly bound in sulfides (pentlandite, pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite). On the contrary, the soil dusts exhibited substantially lower bioaccessible fractions of these metals due to their binding in less soluble spinel‐group oxides. The results indicate that slag dusts are assumed to be risk materials, especially when children are considered as a target group. Still, this exposure scenario seems unrealistic due to (a) the fencing of the former mine area and its inaccessibility to the local community and (b) the low proportion of the fine particles in the granulated slag dump and improbability of their transport by wind. The human health risk related to the incidental ingestion of the soil dust, the most accessible to the local population, seems to be quite limited in the Selebi‐Phikwe area, even when a higher dust ingestion rate (280 mg/d) is considered.
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spelling pubmed-96365852022-11-07 Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana) Ettler, Vojtěch Hladíková, Karolína Mihaljevič, Martin Drahota, Petr Culka, Adam Jedlicka, Radim Kříbek, Bohdan Vaněk, Aleš Penížek, Vít Sracek, Ondra Bagai, Zibisani Geohealth Research Article We studied the dust fractions of the smelting slag, mine tailings, and soil from the former Ni‐Cu mining and processing district in Selebi‐Phikwe (eastern Botswana). Multi‐method chemical and mineralogical investigations were combined with oral bioaccessibility testing of the fine dust fractions (<48  and <10 μm) in a simulated gastric fluid to assess the potential risk of the intake of metal(loid)s contaminants. The total concentrations of the major contaminants varied significantly (Cu: 301–9,600 mg/kg, Ni: 850–7,000 mg/kg, Co: 48–791 mg/kg) but were generally higher in the finer dust fractions. The highest bioaccessible concentrations of Co, Cu, and Ni were found in the slag and mine tailing dusts, where these metals were mostly bound in sulfides (pentlandite, pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite). On the contrary, the soil dusts exhibited substantially lower bioaccessible fractions of these metals due to their binding in less soluble spinel‐group oxides. The results indicate that slag dusts are assumed to be risk materials, especially when children are considered as a target group. Still, this exposure scenario seems unrealistic due to (a) the fencing of the former mine area and its inaccessibility to the local community and (b) the low proportion of the fine particles in the granulated slag dump and improbability of their transport by wind. The human health risk related to the incidental ingestion of the soil dust, the most accessible to the local population, seems to be quite limited in the Selebi‐Phikwe area, even when a higher dust ingestion rate (280 mg/d) is considered. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9636585/ /pubmed/36348990 http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022GH000683 Text en © 2022 The Authors. GeoHealth published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Geophysical Union. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ettler, Vojtěch
Hladíková, Karolína
Mihaljevič, Martin
Drahota, Petr
Culka, Adam
Jedlicka, Radim
Kříbek, Bohdan
Vaněk, Aleš
Penížek, Vít
Sracek, Ondra
Bagai, Zibisani
Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana)
title Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana)
title_full Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana)
title_fullStr Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana)
title_full_unstemmed Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana)
title_short Contaminant Binding and Bioaccessibility in the Dust From the Ni‐Cu Mining/Smelting District of Selebi‐Phikwe (Botswana)
title_sort contaminant binding and bioaccessibility in the dust from the ni‐cu mining/smelting district of selebi‐phikwe (botswana)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9636585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36348990
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022GH000683
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