1. Concentration levels of rare-earth elements and thorium in plants from the Morro do Ferro environment as an indicator for the biological availability of transuranium elements
- Author
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Norbert Miekeley, E. A. Casartelli, and R. M. Dotto
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Thorium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Fractionation ,Actinide ,complex mixtures ,Pollution ,Concentration ratio ,Analytical Chemistry ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,Humic acid ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Leaching (metallurgy) ,Spectroscopy ,Transuranium element - Abstract
Plants and soils from a natural thorium and rare-earth element occurrence (Morro do Ferro, Brazil) were analyzed by alpha spectrometry (Th) and ICP-AES (REE), after pre-concentration of the elements by solvent extraction, co-precipitation and ion exchange procedures. Leaching experiments with humic acid solutions and different soils were performed to estimate the fraction of elements biologically available. High concentrations of the light rare-earth elements (LREE) and of Th, reaching some hundreds of μg/g-ash, were measured in plant leaves from the areas of the highest concentration of these elements in soil and in near-surface waters. Chondrite normalized REE plots of plant leaves and corresponding soils are very similar, suggesting that there is no significant fractionation between the REE during uptake from the soil solution and incorporation into the leaves. However, Ce-depletion was observed for some plant species, increasing forSolanum ciliatum in the sequence: leaves
- Published
- 1994
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