Title of article
Distinguishing between natural and anthropogenic sources for elements in the environment: regional geochemical surveys versus enrichment factors
Author/Authors
Clemens Reimanna، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Patrice de Caritatb، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
17
From page
91
To page
107
Abstract
High element enrichment factors (EFs) are commonly used in the literature to support the hypothesis that a particular suite of
elements is of anthropogenic origin. Real-world examples of regional geochemical surveys demonstrate that EFs can be high or
low due to a multitude of reasons, of which contamination is but one. This applies to EFs calculated relative to either the crust or
some local background (e.g., a deeper soil layer). Results from local studies near industrial centres showing high (and pollutionrelated)
EFs cannot be generalised over large areas or for sample sites far removed (i.e., more than some tens of kilometers)
from a likely pollution source. Regional-scale geochemical mapping, on the other hand, facilitates the reliable estimation of the
influence of contamination on the measured element concentrations. EFs are strongly influenced by, among other factors,
biogeochemical processes that redistribute chemical elements between environmental compartments at the Earth’s surface.
Using EFs to detect or dproveT human influence on element cycles in remote areas should be avoided because, in most cases,
high EFs cannot conclusively demonstrate, nor even suggest, such influence.
Keywords
contamination , Natural variation , Regional geochemistry , background , biogeochemistry
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
983955
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