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Soil and Sediment Toxicity

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Nobody cared much about soil at the beginning of the environmental movement ... started a canal in town of Niagra Falls, NY to connect upper and lower Niagara ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Soil and Sediment Toxicity


1
Soil and Sediment Toxicity
  • Getting Down n Dirty

2
Introduction
  • Nobody cared much about soil at the beginning of
    the environmental movement
  • Environmental scientists eventually realized ?
    almost everything ends up in soil or sediments ?
    currently large area of interest

3
Magnitude of Soil Contamination Problem
  • Large problem ? Soil contamination associated
    with worst toxic dumps in US
  • 30 located in Northeast
  • 12 in NJ (the Garden State)
  • Usually in/near metropolitan areas
  • Large economic losses
  • Spills contaminate soil, then groundwater,
    farmland (Toxic Real Estate)
  • History of mismanagement of waste by
    municipalities (i.e. Love Canal)

4
The Love Canal Saga
  • William T. Love started a canal in town of Niagra
    Falls, NY to connect upper and lower Niagara
    River for power generation.
  • Canal abandoned when invention of AC spawned
    long-distance electric power.
  • Hooker Chemicals and Plastics Corp. dumped 22,000
    tons of chemical products in canal from 1920 to
    1953 (with full knowledge of city officials)
  • 1953 ? When full, canal backfilled with soil and
    presumed safe.
  • City's Board of Ed. bought the dump site in1953,
    ? aware of chemicals (listed in deed), but
    ignored the problem to build a school.
  • 1957 ? city punched a sewer line through Canal
    walls, allowing wastes to seep throughout the
    neighborhood sewer system
  • Baby Boom ? residential development occurs along
    and on old dump site
  • 1968 ? NY DoT builds highway along edge of site,
    disturbs more buried chemicals
  • Early 70s ? People begin showing health
    problem, including increased cancer and birth
    defects

5
Love Canal changes over time
Love Canal in 1951
Love Canal in 1980
6
The Saga Continues
  • 1978 ? Jimmy Carter declares area a federal
    emergency and 260 families are relocated
  • Homes demolished, land fenced off
  • 1980 Comprehensive Environmental Response,
    Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA,
    Superfund) passed ? EPA used CERCLA to sue
    Hooker, wins 129 million for clean-up.
  • Final containment (plastic, clay cap) of most
    polluted soil completed in 1995
  • People started to move back into Love Canal
    because newly built houses were cheap.

Demolition and soil containment
Abandoned street in Love Canal,
circa 2005
7
CERCLA
  • Initiated largely in response to Love Canal
  • Designed to identify deep pockets responsible
    for site contamination
  • Funded by tax on petroleum and chemical
    industries
  • gt 15 billion spent since creation

Photo from Wikipedia
8
I. What is soil?
  • Types very diverse
  • Mix of rock, weathered mineral, and organic
    matter
  • 95 is mineral matter by dry weight (but only 45
    by volume)
  • Lots of air space (20-30 by volume) ? lots of
    room for infiltration/retention of pollutants

9
Soil Classification
  • Classified by composition based on particle size
  • Sand coarse ? high infiltration, percolation
  • Silt intermediate
  • Clay finest ? less pore volume, hard to
    penetrate but greater long-term retention

10
Clay Composition
  • Composed of Al and Si sheets
  • large surface area for
  • Adsorption
  • Large sum of negative charges high cation
    exchange capacity (can hold cations large
    buffering capacity but many cations may be
    pollutants i.e. metals)
  • Therefore, clays can be good or bad ? hold more
    (bad) but holding may keep pollutants from being
    available to ecosystem (good)

11
II. Sources of Soil Pollution
  • Direct pollution dumping, accidental spills
    (trucks, trains, aeroplanes), leaks, landfills
  • Deposition from atmosphere (especially acid rain)
  • Sediments from water pollution

12
III. Factors Affecting Severity of Impact
  • Infiltration how fast pollutant gets into the
    soil (how fast need to clean up?)
  • Percolation how far down into the soil does it
    go? (reach water table?)
  • Retention how long does it stay?
  • Buffering capacity (adsorption capacity) soil
    becomes toxic only after binding
    ability/reduction in availability is overcome

13
IV. Soil Factors Affecting Toxicology
  • Bulk density (g/m3) and porosity
  • - compact soils have reduced air space lower
    infiltration and percolation
  • pH sorption to soil is often pH dependent
    (note soils are usually good buffers ? hard to
    change pH
  • PCBs decreased pH increased adsorption
    decreased toxicity
  • Al, Mn become more bioavailable as decrease pH
    increased toxicity
  • Ammonia ammonium ion (NH4) converted to
    ammonia (NH3) at high pH

14
IV. Soil Factors Affecting Toxicology
  • Topography
  • Often determines soil properties and pollution
    load
  • Ridgetop soils shallower, better drained than
    bottomland soil
  • Bottomland soils greater repository for
    pollutants
  • collect from ridgetop leaching and what is
    purposely deposited there (remember Alices
    Restaurant)
  • Organic Matter Content
  • OM has negative ionic charge that can absorb and
    retain pollutants
  • High OM soils occur in colder climates and poor
    soil aeration ? both inhibit breakdown of OM

15
V. Remediation
  • Liming or acid addition adjust/balance pH
  • Soil burning
  • very costly, not usually done
  • way to dispose of dioxin ? burn at 1000 C.
    (reason why Agent Orange burned at sea)
  • Soil removal
  • common method during early Superfund but really
    just moving pollutants around (Alices Restaurant
    ? one trash pile better than two)
  • Now just used for special cases (e.g. Radon? PA,
    NJ, Mn)

16
V. Remediation
  • Bioremediation
  • toxin-eating microbes ? good possibility for
    GMOs?
  • Containment
  • put up fence and signs to keep away or DIE!
  • Pump and Treat
  • Contaminated groundwater from contaminated soil,
    may treat chemically or burn

17
Sediments
18
I. What are Sediments?
  • Also very diverse in composition
  • Basically aquatic environment version of soils
  • 1 repository for biotic and abiotic material
    (including pollutants) in aquatic environment
  • Accumulation of sediment pollutants can cause
  • Changes in benthic community structure
  • Increased body burdens
  • Toxicity

19
Sediment Classification
  • Organic carbon content affects sorption of
    neutral organic chemicals ? increased Kow
    increased sorption
  • Particle size distribution larger particles
    tend to sorp fewer pollutants
  • Clay content and type can change pollutant
  • Cation exchange capacity affect sorption of
    cations
  • pH affects metal speciation, sorption

20
II. Implications of Sediment Transport
  • Wind, Wave and Currents
  • Moves sediments around according to particle sise
  • Results in
  • Clay suspended in water columns
  • Sand (or larger) in high energy areas
  • Silt in low energy (depositional) areas
  • Note can cause sediment focusing
  • Sediment Focusing
  • Different sediment types carry different
    pollutants ? pollutants accumulate according to
    distribution of sediment to which they are
    attached
  • Example Great Lakes ? DDT, methoxychlor found in
    fine clay particles, endosulfan on larger
    particles

21
II. Implications of Sediment Transport
  • Pore/Interstitial Water
  • Water between sediment particles
  • Non-polar pollutants ? sediments ? pore water ?
    overlying water column
  • Primary source of pollutant exposure to
    sediment-associated organisms
  • Sediments may bind pollutants, then get overlayed
    by non-pollution containing sediments ? reduce
    bioavailability
  • May be better to leave contaminated sediments in
    place rather than dredging them up, resuspending
    them and making biologially active again (e.g.
    lower Hudson River and New York harbor, Charles
    River and Boston Harbor, Potomac River and
    Washington estuary)
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