Title of article :
Mercury contamination from artisanal gold mining in Antioquia, Colombia: The worldʹs highest per capita mercury pollution Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Paul Cordy، نويسنده , , Marcello M. Veiga، نويسنده , , Ibrahim Salih، نويسنده , , Sari Al-Saadi، نويسنده , , Stephanie Console، نويسنده , , Oseas Garcia، نويسنده , , Luis Alberto Mesa، نويسنده , , Patricio C. Vel?squez-L?pez، نويسنده , , Monika Roeser، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
7
From page :
154
To page :
160
Abstract :
The artisanal gold mining sector in Colombia has 200,000 miners officially producing 30 tonnes Au/a. In the Northeast of the Department of Antioquia, there are 17 mining towns and between 15,000 and 30,000 artisanal gold miners. Guerrillas and paramilitary activities in the rural areas of Antioquia pushed miners to bring their gold ores to the towns to be processed in Processing Centers or entables. These Centers operate in the urban areas amalgamating the whole ore, i.e. without previous concentration, and later burn gold amalgam without any filtering/condensing system. Based on mercury mass balance in 15 entables, 50% of the mercury added to small ball mills (cocos) is lost: 46% with tailings and 4% when amalgam is burned. In just 5 cities of Antioquia, with a total of 150,000 inhabitants: Segovia, Remedios, Zaragoza, El Bagre, and Nechí, there are 323 entables producing 10–20 tonnes Au/a. Considering the average levels of mercury consumption estimated by mass balance and interviews of entables owners, the mercury consumed (and lost) in these 5 municipalities must be around 93 tonnes/a. Urban air mercury levels range from 300 ng Hg/m3 (background) to 1 million ng Hg/m3 (inside gold shops) with 10,000 ng Hg/m3 being common in residential areas. The WHO limit for public exposure is 1000 ng/m3. The total mercury release/emissions to the Colombian environment can be as high as 150 tonnes/a giving this country the shameful first position as the worldʹs largest mercury polluter per capita from artisanal gold mining. One necessary government intervention is to cut the supply of mercury to the entables. In 2009, eleven companies in Colombia legally imported 130 tonnes of metallic mercury, much of it flowing to artisanal gold mines. Entables must be removed from urban centers and technical assistance is badly needed to improve their technology and reduce emissions.
Keywords :
Amalgamation , Colombia , Artisanal mining , Antioquia , Air pollution , Mercury
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Record number :
987921
Link To Document :
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