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Investigating the geochemical controls on PB bioaccessibility in urban agricultural soils to inform sustainable site management

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Lindsay BramwellORCiD

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Abstract

© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.The solid-phase speciation of contaminants in soil plays a major role in regulating both the environmental mobility of contaminants and their bioavailability in biological receptors such as humans. With the increasing prevalence of urban agriculture, in tandem with growing evidence of the negative health impacts of even low levels of exposure to Pb, there is a pressing need to provide regulators with a relevant evidence base on which to build human health risk assessments and construct sustainable site management plans. We detail how the solid-phase fractionation of Pb from selected urban agricultural soil samples, using sequential extraction, can be utilised to interpret the bioaccessible fraction of Pb and ultimately inform sustainable site management plans. Our sequential extraction data shows that the Pb in our urban soils is primarily associated with Al oxide phases, with the second most important phase associated with either Fe oxyhydroxide or crystalline FeO, and only to a limited extent with Ca carbonates. We interpret the co-presence of a P component with the Al oxide cluster to indicate the soils contain Pb phosphate type minerals, such as plumbogummite (PbAl3(PO4)2(OH)5·H2O), as a consequence of natural “soil aging” processes. The presence of Pb phosphates, in conjunction with our biomonitoring data, which indicates the lack of elevated blood Pb levels in our gardeners compared to their non-gardening neighbours, suggests the (legacy) Pb in these soils has been rendered relatively immobile. This study has given confidence to the local authority regulators, and the gardeners, that these urban gardens can be safe to use, even where soil Pb levels are up to ten times above the UK’s recommended lead screening level. The advice to our urban gardeners, based on our findings, is to carry on gardening but follow recommended good land management and hygiene practices.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Entwistle J, Bramwell L, Wragg J, Cave M, Hamilton E, Gardner A, Dean JR

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Geosciences

Year: 2020

Volume: 10

Issue: 10

Pages: 1-19

Online publication date: 05/10/2020

Acceptance date: 01/10/2020

ISSN (electronic): 2076-3263

Publisher: MDPI AG

URL: https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10100398

DOI: 10.3390/geosciences10100398


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