Title of article :
Evaluation of background geochemical speciation of heavy metals in overburden topsoil of bituminous sand deposit area, Ondo state, Nigeria
Author/Authors :
Ifelola, O.E Department of Mining Engineering - School of Engineering and Engineering Technology - The Federal University of Technology - Akure - Ondo, Nigeria
Abstract :
Metals are ubiquitous within the earth crust. However, the exceptional high-level
concentration of heavy metals in the soil due to natural or anthropogenic activities and
the chemical forms in which they exist determine the level of risk they portend to the
environment. This work was aimed at determining the background level of the presence
of seven priority toxic metals (Cr, Ni, Pb, As, Cd, Cu, Zn) in the chemical phases of the
overburden topsoil of a bituminous deposit prior to mining activities through the
speciation analysis. The grab samples of overburden topsoil were initially obtained and
homogenized to composites based on locations for the subsequent sequential extraction
procedure (SEP). The specific physico-chemical properties of the sampled soils were
simultaneously determined to complement the SEP inferential analysis. The results
obtained showed that most metals were spatially bounded to the Fe-Mn oxides
(reducible phase) followed by the organic (oxidizable) and the carbonates phases,
respectively. Fractionally, the dominant soil texture in the studied area was sand
(55.45%); however, the colloidal organic matter and Fe-Mn oxide phases played the
dominant roles in the sorption activities of the selected metals. The soil chemical phase
with the least metal pool was the exchangeable (water/salt) soluble fraction. The overall
assessment revealed that the geogenic heavy metals in the topsoil posed no threats since
a marginal fraction of the metals existed in the bio-available form in non-toxic
concentrations in the order of Pb > Zn > Cu, while the potential mobility of metals
showed that Zn was preferentially higher than Pb and Cu, respectively
Keywords :
Environment Sorption , Heavy Metal , Speciation , Overburden Topsoil , Bio-Availability