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Legacy of contamination with metal(loid)s and their potential mobilization in soils at a carbonate-hosted lead-zinc mine area.

Authors :
Li, Xinyang
Zhou, Tong
Li, Zhu
Wang, Wenyong
Zhou, Jiawen
Hu, Pengjie
Luo, Yongming
Christie, Peter
Wu, Longhua
Source :
Chemosphere. Dec2022:Part 3, Vol. 308, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Chemical weathering of carbonate-hosted Pb–Zn mines via acid-promoted or oxidative dissolution generates metal-bearing colloids at neutral mine drainage sites. However, the mobility and bioavailability of the colloids associated with metals in nearby soils are unknown. Here, we monitored the mobility of metal(loid)s in soils affected by aeolian deposition and river transport in the vicinity of a carbonate-hosted Pb–Zn mine. Using chemical extraction, ultrafiltration, and microscopic and spectroscopic analysis of metals we find that contamination levels of the soil metals cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb) and zinc (Zn) were negatively correlated with metal extractability. However, nano-scale characterization indicates that colloid-metal(loid) interactions induced potential mobilization and increased risk from metal(loid)s. Dynamic light scattering (DLS) and HRTEM-EDX-SAED analysis further indicate that organic matter (OM)-rich nano-colloids associated with calcium (Ca), silicon (Si) and iron (Fe) precipitates accounted for the majority of the dissolved metal fractions in carbonate-hosted Pb–Zn mine soils. More stable nano-crystals (ZnS, ZnCO 3 , Zn-bearing sulfates, hematite and Al–Si–Fe compounds) were present in the pore water of aeolian-impacted upland soils rather than in river water-impacted soils. Our results suggest that future work should consider the possibility that potential mobilization of metal(loid)s induced by the weathering and transformation of these metal-bearing nano-crystals to metal-bearing amorphous colloids, potentially elevating metal mobility and/or bioavailability in river water-impacted agricultural soils. [Display omitted] • Soil metal levels were negatively correlated with soil metal extractability. • More water-dispersive colloids are bound to trace metals than base metals. • Abundant nano-colloids promoted the mobilization of metals in mine-impacted soils. • Formation of nanocrystals induced sequestration of metals in aeolian-impacted soil. • Formation of amorphous colloids induced metal mobilization in river-impacted soils. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
308
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159432887
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.136589