Sholts Sabrina B, Smith Kevin, Wallin Cecilia, Ahmed Trifa M, Wärmländer Sebastian K T S
Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA.
Center for Experimental Archaeology at Davis (CEAD), Department of Anthropology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Environ Health. 2017 Jun 23;16(1):61. doi: 10.1186/s12940-017-0261-1.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are the main toxic compounds in natural bitumen, a fossil material used by modern and ancient societies around the world. The adverse health effects of PAHs on modern humans are well established, but their health impacts on past populations are unclear. It has previously been suggested that a prehistoric health decline among the native people living on the California Channel Islands may have been related to PAH exposure. Here, we assess the potential health risks of PAH exposure from the use and manufacture of bitumen-coated water bottles by ancient California Indian societies.
We replicated prehistoric bitumen-coated water bottles with traditional materials and techniques of California Indians, based on ethnographic and archaeological evidence. In order to estimate PAH exposure related to water bottle manufacture and use, we conducted controlled experiments to measure PAH contamination 1) in air during the manufacturing process and 2) in water and olive oil stored in a completed bottle for varying periods of time. Samples were analyzed with gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) for concentrations of the 16 PAHs identified by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as priority pollutants.
Eight PAHs were detected in concentrations of 1-10 μg/m in air during bottle production and 50-900 ng/L in water after 2 months of storage, ranging from two-ring (naphthalene and methylnaphthalene) to four-ring (fluoranthene) molecules. All 16 PAHs analyzed were detected in olive oil after 2 days (2 to 35 μg/kg), 2 weeks (3 to 66 μg/kg), and 2 months (5 to 140 μg/kg) of storage.
For ancient California Indians, water stored in bitumen-coated water bottles was not a significant source of PAH exposure, but production of such bottles could have resulted in harmful airborne PAH exposure.
多环芳烃(PAHs)是天然沥青中的主要有毒化合物,天然沥青是一种化石材料,被世界各地的现代和古代社会所使用。PAHs对现代人类的不良健康影响已得到充分证实,但其对过去人群的健康影响尚不清楚。此前有人提出,生活在加利福尼亚海峡群岛的原住民史前健康状况下降可能与PAH暴露有关。在此,我们评估古代加利福尼亚印第安社会使用和制造涂有沥青的水瓶所导致的PAH暴露的潜在健康风险。
基于人种学和考古学证据,我们用加利福尼亚印第安人的传统材料和技术复制了史前涂有沥青的水瓶。为了估计与水瓶制造和使用相关的PAH暴露,我们进行了对照实验,以测量1)制造过程中空气中的PAH污染,以及2)在一个完整的瓶子中储存不同时间段的水和橄榄油中的PAH污染。样品用气相色谱/质谱联用仪(GC/MS)分析,以测定美国环境保护局(EPA)确定为优先污染物的16种PAHs的浓度。
在瓶子生产过程中,空气中检测到8种PAHs,浓度为1 - 10μg/m,储存2个月后水中检测到的浓度为50 - 900ng/L,范围从二环(萘和甲基萘)到四环(荧蒽)分子。在储存2天(2至35μg/kg)、2周(3至66μg/kg)和2个月(5至140μg/kg)后,在橄榄油中检测到了所有分析的16种PAHs。
对于古代加利福尼亚印第安人来说,储存在涂有沥青的水瓶中的水不是PAH暴露的重要来源,但制造这种瓶子可能会导致有害的空气中PAH暴露。