dc.creatorTume Zapata, Pedro
dc.creatorRoca, Núria
dc.creatorRubio, Rodrigo
dc.creatorKing St Onge, Robert
dc.creatorBech, Jaume
dc.date2020-05-11T23:05:31Z
dc.date2020-05-11T23:05:31Z
dc.date2018-01
dc.identifierJournal of Geochemical Exploration, volume 184, Part B, January 2018, pages 345-357
dc.identifier0375-6742
dc.identifierhttp://repositoriodigital.ucsc.cl/handle/25022009/1460
dc.descriptionArtículo de publicación ISI
dc.descriptionAs a common component of urban ecosystems, urban soils generally have elevated concentrations of potentially hazardous elements originating from both point and diffuse sources of pollution in cities. This study focuses on the port city of Arica in northern Chile, where anthropogenic activities may have led to contamination of the uppermost topsoil layer. The purpose of this study is to (1) establish background content levels of potentially hazardous elements in topsoils of different land uses using different statistical approaches and (2) assess the degree of topsoil pollution and identify the local sources of pollution using multivariate statistical and geostatistical methods. Data from a Chilean Government CONAMA report were analyzed. Geostatistical methods such as kriging were applied to identify the spatial distribution of potential hazards elements. Potentially hazardous elements' background values were determined by median + 2MAD, inflection points within cumulative frequency plots and upper whisker of a Tukey's boxplot. Multivariate statistical methods were applied in the identification of trace metal sources (anthropogenic vs natural origin). Soil pollution assessment was performed using the geoaccumulation index (Igeo), enrichment factor (EF), contamination factor (Cf) and integrated pollution index (IPI). The maps obtained show high baseline values for some elements (As, Cu, Pb and Zn), which denote a clear anthropogenic contribution due to the long period of constant human activities in the study area. Therefore, background values are estimated with the median + 2 × MAD procedure and yielded As (17.4 mg kg− 1), Ba (23.3 mg kg− 1), Cr (13.6 mg kg− 1), Cu (37.4 mg kg− 1), Ni (8.3 mg kg− 1), Pb (313 mg kg− 1), V (101 mg kg− 1) and Zn (235 mg kg− 1). The calculated soil pollution indexes Igeo, EF, Cf and IPI revealed significant ecological impacts. Copper and As are the two trace elements with the highest contaminated soil values; however, Cu, Pb and Zn have greater numbers of soil sample sites in the moderately to heavily contaminated range. The IPI showed extremely high pollution index in ten soil sites in Arica. Moreover, significant differences were observed with different land uses, where soils along the railway line and industrial area are the most polluted.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherElsevier
dc.sourcehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.gexplo.2016.09.011
dc.subjectLand use factors
dc.subjectTopsoil contamination
dc.subjectAnthropogenic contamination sources
dc.titleAn assessment of the potentially hazardous element contamination in urban soils of Arica, Chile
dc.typeArticle


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