Department of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Macquarie University-Sydney, North Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2015 May 15;515-516:143-52. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.02.010. Epub 2015 Feb 23.
Although metal exposures in the environment have declined over the last two decades, certain activities and locations still present a risk of harm to human health. This study examines environmental dust metal and metalloid hazards (arsenic, cadmium, lead and nickel) associated with bulk mineral transport, loading and unloading port operations in public locations and children's playgrounds in the inner city of Townsville, northern Queensland. The mean increase in lead on post-play hand wipes (965 μg/m(2)/day) across all sites was more than 10-times the mean pre-play loadings (95 μg/m(2)/day). Maximum loading values after a 10-minute play period were 3012 μg/m(2), more than seven times the goal of 400 μg/m(2) used by the Government of Western Australia (2011). Maximum daily nickel post-play hand loadings (404 μg/m(2)) were more than 26 times above the German Federal Immission Control Act 2002 annual benchmark of 15 μg/m(2)/day. Repeat sampling over the 5-day study period showed that hands and surfaces were re-contaminated daily from the deposition of metal-rich atmospheric dusts. Lead isotopic composition analysis of dust wipes ((208)Pb/(207)Pb and (206)Pb/(207)Pb) showed that surface dust lead was similar to Mount Isa type ores, which are exported through the Port of Townsville. While dust metal contaminant loadings are lower than other mining and smelting towns in Australia, they exceeded national and international benchmarks for environmental quality. The lessons from this study are clear - even where operations are considered acceptable by managing authorities, targeted assessment and monitoring can be used to evaluate whether current management practices are truly best practice. Reassessment can identify opportunities for improvement and maximum environmental and human health protection.
尽管过去二十年来环境中的金属暴露量有所下降,但某些活动和地点仍然对人类健康构成危害。本研究调查了昆士兰州汤斯维尔市中心的大宗矿物运输、装卸港口作业相关的环境灰尘金属和类金属(砷、镉、铅和镍)危害,以及在公共场所和儿童游乐区的情况。所有地点的儿童玩耍后手擦拭物中铅的平均增加量(965μg/m(2)/天)比玩耍前负荷(95μg/m(2)/天)高出 10 多倍。在 10 分钟的玩耍期后,最大负荷值为 3012μg/m(2),是西澳大利亚州政府(2011 年)规定的 400μg/m(2)目标的 7 倍多。玩耍后手最大日负荷镍量(404μg/m(2))比德国联邦污染物排放控制法 2002 年规定的每年基准值 15μg/m(2)/天高出 26 多倍。在为期 5 天的研究期间进行的重复采样显示,金属含量较高的大气灰尘每天都会使手和表面重新受到污染。对擦拭物的灰尘铅同位素组成分析((208)Pb/(207)Pb 和 (206)Pb/(207)Pb)表明,表面灰尘中的铅与通过汤斯维尔港出口的芒特艾萨型矿石相似。虽然灰尘金属污染物负荷低于澳大利亚其他采矿和冶炼城镇,但它们超过了国家和国际环境质量基准。本研究得出的教训很明确——即使管理当局认为运营活动是可接受的,仍可以进行有针对性的评估和监测,以评估当前的管理实践是否真正符合最佳实践。重新评估可以确定改进的机会,实现最大的环境和人类健康保护。