Artículos de revistas
A new approach to assess the degree of contamination and determine sources and risks related to PTEs in an urban environment: the case study of Santiago (Chile)
Date
2022Registration in:
Environmental Geochemistry and Health January 2022
10.1007/ s10653-021-01185-6.
Author
Aruta, Antonio
Albanese, Stefano
Daniele, Dolorinda
Cannatelli, Claudia
Buscher, Jamie Todd
De Vivo, Benedetto
Petrik, Attila
Cicchella, Doménico
Lima, Annamaria
Institutions
Abstract
In 2017, a geochemical survey was carried
out across the Commune of Santiago, a local administrative
unit located at the center of the namesake
capital city of Chile, and the concentration of a number
of major and trace elements (53 in total) was
determined on 121 topsoil samples. Multifractal
IDW (MIDW) interpolation method was applied to
raw data to generate geochemical baseline maps of 15
potential toxic elements (PTEs); the concentration–
area (C-A) plot was applied to MIDW grids to contamination sources (Urban traffic, productive settlements,
etc.). A risk assessment was finally completed
to potentially relate contamination sources to
their potential effect on public health in the long term.
A probabilistic approach, based on Monte Carlo
method, was deemed more appropriate to include
uncertainty due to spatial variation of geochemical
data across the study area. Results showed how the
integrated use of multivariate statistics and compositional
data analysis gave the authors the chance to both
discriminate between main contamination processes
characterizing the soil of Santiago and to observe the
existence of secondary phenomena that are normally
difficult to constrain. Furthermore, it was demonstrated
how a probabilistic approach in risk assessment
could offer a more reliable view of the complexity of
the process considering uncertainty as an integral part
of the results.