Title: Soil Pollution:
 1Soil Pollution 
- The introduction of substances, biological 
 organisms, or energy into the soil, resulting in
 a change of the soil quality, which is likely to
 affect the normal use of the soil or endangering
 public health and the living environment.
2- Soil contaminants are spilled onto the surface 
 through many different activities.
- Most of these are the result of accidents 
 involving the vehicles that are transporting
 waste material from the site at which it
 originated to the site at which it is to be
 disposed.
3- Others involve accidents involving vehicles 
 (automobiles, trucks and airplanes) not
 transporting wastes, but carrying materials,
 including fuel, that when spilled contaminate the
 soil.
4- Still other spills are the direct action of 
 humans pouring potentially toxic materials
 (solvents, paints, household cleaning agents,
 etc.) onto the ground surface rather than
 disposing these materials by more appropriate
 means.
5Pollutant on surface of soil
- When any liquid pollutant is on or just below the 
 ground surface for any period of time, one of
 three things could happen to it, if it is not
 cleaned up first.
- 1- pollutant might be washed away by 
 precipitation, causing little or no harm to the
 ground on which it was found ( however,
 pollutants will simply accumulate somewhere else)
6- 2- the pollutant, if volatile, could evaporate, 
 again causing little harm to the soil ( however,
 not a solution to the bigger pollution problem,
 as it might become a source of air pollution).
- 3- pollutant could infiltrate through the 
 unsaturated soil, in much the same way as ground
 water.
7- Agricultural practices, including the use of 
 agricultural chemicals, are another primary
 source of pollution on or near the ground
 surface.
- Most agricultural chemicals are water-soluble 
 nitrates and phosphates that are applied to
 fields, lawns and gardens to stimulate the growth
 of crops, grass and flowers.
8Ag Chemicals
- When not used by the plants the nutrients can 
 enter streams and lakes during the run-off or
 leaching events.
- Once in a body of water, these chemicals continue 
 to promote the growth of plants, the resulting
 plant detritus is food for micro-organisms, and
 as the population of such organisms grows, the
 supply of oxygen in the water is depleted.
9- "Biochemical Oxygen Demand", or "BOD". This means 
 that the water is capable of supporting a large
 population of bacteria that will have a high
 demand for oxygen.
10Biocontrol- avoiding use of chemicals
- Choose a cover crop as a bio-control for a 
 specific pest
- Time tillage to give crops the best advantage 
 from the resulting biological activity
- Manage habitats at the edge of fields to support 
 predators of pests
11Biocontrol
- Choose pesticides partially based on the 
 non-target organisms they affect
- Choose a source of compost and manure based on 
 how it impacts disease or crop-enhancing organisms
12Soil Pollution
- Information needed to clean up materials added to 
 soil include
-  1) Kind of material - organic or inorganic - is 
 the material biodegradable, is the material
 dangerous to animals and humans,
- 2) how much material was added to the soil, will 
 it overload the organisms in the soil
- 3) CN ratio of the material, are additional 
 nutrients needed ( N  P)
13Soil Pollution
-  4) Kind of Soil - will the soil be able to 
 handle the material before groundwater is
 contaminated,
- 5) Growing conditions for the soil organisms - is 
 it too cold, too wet etc.
- 6) How long has the material been on the site - 
 is there evidence of environmental problems, is
 it undergoing decomposition.
- 7) Immediate danger to people and the 
 environment - Urgency of the situation.
14Bioremediation
- A treatment process that uses microorganisms 
 (yeast, fungi, or bacteria) to break down, or
 degrade, hazardous substances into less toxic or
 nontoxic substances (carbon dioxide and water)
15Conditions that favor Bioremediation
- Temperature favorable for organisms 
- Water available (near field capacity) 
- Nutrients (N, P, K) in adequate supply 
-  CN ratio of material lt 301 
- Material added is similar to naturally occurring 
 organic material
- Oxygen in sufficient quantity
16In-situ-Bioremediation
- Biostimulation (stimulates biological activity) 
- Bioventing (Inject air/nutrients into unsaturated 
 zone  good for midweight petroleum, jet fuel)
- Biosparging (Inject air/nutrients into 
 unsaturated and saturated zones)
- Bioaugmentation (inoculates soil with microbes)
- Less expensive 
- Creates less dust 
- Less possibility of contaminant release into 
 environment
- Good for large volumes 
- Slower 
- Doesnt work well in clays or highly layered 
 subsurfaces
17Biostimulation
Biosparging 
 18Ex-situ -Bioremediation
- Slurry-phase 
- Soil combined with water/additives in tank, 
 microorganisms, nutrients, oxygen added
- Solid-phase 
- Land-farming soil put on pad, leachate collected 
- Soil biopiles soil heaped, air added 
- Composting biodegradable waste mixed with 
 bulking agent
- Easier to control 
- Used to treat wider range of contaminants and 
 soil types
- Costly 
- Faster
19Slurry/Solid Phase 
 20Processes affecting the dissipation of organic 
chemicals 
detoxication
crop removal
photo-dec.
Runoff
volatilization
absorption  exudation 
chemical decomposition
Biological degradation
may be transformed into - harmful or harmless
leaching 
 21Affect of soil pH on adsorption of 4 heavy metals
Pb
Adsorption
Cu
Zn
Cd
3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 
6.5 7.0
 Soil pH 
 22Forms of heavy metals found in soils that had 
received sewage sludge (45mg/ha) for 5 years
 of Elements in each form
Forms Cd Cr Cu 
 Ni Pb Zn
Exchangeable/adsorbed 1 1 
 2 5 1 2 Organically bound 
 20 5 34 24 
3 28 Carbonate/iron oxides 64 
 19 36 33 85 39 residual 
 16 77 
 29 40 12 31
 sulfides and other very insoulble forms 
 23Dyad on Pollution
- 1) Describe a situation that would cause the soil 
 to become polluted with an organic waste.
- 2) Describe what you would do to clean up this 
 pollution.
24The End