Title of article :
Quantities and associations of lead, zinc, cadmium,
manganese, chromium, nickel, vanadium, and copper in
fresh Mississippi delta alluvium and New Orleans
alluvial soils
Author/Authors :
H.W. Mielkea، نويسنده , , U، نويسنده , , C.R. Gonzalesa، نويسنده , , M.K. Smitha، نويسنده , , P.W. Mielkeb، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The topic of this study is the effect of anthropogenic metals on the geochemical quality of urban soils. This is
accomplished by comparing the metal contents and associations between two alluvial soils of the lower Mississippi
River Delta, freshly deposited alluvial parent materials and alluvial soils collected from a nearby urban environment.
Fresh alluvium samples ns97. were collected from the Bonnet Carr´e Spillway. The urban alluvial soil samples
ns4026. were collected from New Orleans and stratified by census tracts ns286.. The Spillway samples tend to
have less Pb and Zn than generally noted for the baseline of natural soils. Except for Mn and V, Spillway alluvium
contains significantly less metal than urban soils. For Spillway samples, the median metal content in mg gy1. is 4.7
Pb, 11.1 Zn, 0.7 Cd, 164 Mn, 0.8 Cr, 3.9 Ni, 3.2 V, and 3.9 Cu. For urban soils, the median metal content in mg gy1.
is 120 Pb, 130 Zn, 3.2 Cd, 138 Mn, 2.1 Cr, 9.8 Ni, 3.8 V, and 12.7 Cu. Metal associations also differ between Spillway
alluvium and urban alluvial soils. Fresh alluvium correlation coefficients between individual metals vary from 0.87 to
0.99 P-10y13. except for Cr which ranges from 0.57 to 0.68 P-10y7 .. The urban soil correlation coefficients for
metals and the index value are 0.40]0.98. In urban soils, Pb, Zn, Cr, and Cu are dominant metals and highly
associated, with a correlation coefficient ranging from 0.83 to 0.98 P-10y25.. Their strong association justifies the
use of GIS to map the integrated soil metal index sum of the medians of metals by census tract. of New Orleans.
Although also positively correlated 0.40]0.68, P-10y10 ., Cd, Mn, Ni and V differ in their distribution in the city
compared to Pb, Zn, Cr and Cu. Overall, significantly higher metal values occur in the inner city and lower values
occur in outlying areas. The human health impact of the mixture of metals is not well understood. This study provides empirical data about the mixture and distribution of metals in New Orleans alluvial soils. Given common
technical development, especially of traffic flows in cities, similar patterns of soil metals are expected for all US cities
and probably international cities as well. Primary prevention of urban metal accumulations is necessary to enhance
and sustain the development of urban culture.
Keywords :
Background soil metal concentrations , GIS , Soil metal maps , urban geochemistry