University of Wrocław, Institute of Geological Sciences, Pl. M. Borna 9, 50-204 Wrocław, Poland.
University of Wrocław, Institute of Geological Sciences, Pl. M. Borna 9, 50-204 Wrocław, Poland.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Feb 10;755(Pt 1):142620. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142620. Epub 2020 Oct 1.
Ultramafic soils are in equal parts fascinating and dangerous. Developed on rocks derived predominately from the Earth's mantle and metamorphosed at the ocean floors, ultramafic soils form in the places where tectonic forces brought these rocks from mantle depths to the surface. As it is common in nature, both ultramafic rocks and soils are site-specific, and vary in character and composition; however, they have one thing in common, they are enriched in certain elements and three metals in particular form an "ultramafic" triad: Ni, Cr, and Co. These three metals are far from being human-friendly and strict legislative limits are established for maximum allowable concentrations of these metals in soils, but mostly in the case when the metals are of anthropogenic origin. However, ultramafic soils are a natural phenomenon where increased metal content is not the result of pollution, but rather referred as a peculiar geochemical background, therefore there is no reason for their remediation. At the same time, it is not that easy to actually find an ultramafic soil that does not overstep the limits (for the sake of this paper we use median world Regulatory Guidance Values - RGVs). Often, mobile Ni and Co concentrations are above the guidelines when doing tests to estimate the bioavailable fraction (EDTA and DTPA), and high concentrations of Ni are also commonly present in excluder plants (also edible ones). Also waters in ultramafic areas often exceed Ni and Cr(VI) limits. It is therefore expected that the ultramafic metals are present in the food chain and they might constitute a potential health risk. Thus, there is a need for additional research focused on assessment of the potential health consequences of chronic high exposure on naturally occurring Ni, Cr, and Co.
超镁铁质土壤既有魅力又有危险。这些土壤形成于构造力将这些岩石从地幔深处带到地表的地方,主要由地球地幔衍生的岩石形成,并在海底变质。超镁铁质土壤与超镁铁质岩石一样,是特定地点的产物,其性质和组成各不相同;然而,它们有一个共同点,即富含某些元素,特别是三种金属形成了“超镁铁质”三联体:镍 (Ni)、铬 (Cr) 和钴 (Co)。这三种金属对人类并不友好,因此为这些金属在土壤中的最大允许浓度制定了严格的立法限制,但主要是在这些金属具有人为来源的情况下。然而,超镁铁质土壤是一种自然现象,其中金属含量的增加不是污染的结果,而是被称为特殊的地球化学背景,因此没有理由对其进行修复。同时,实际上要找到一种不超过限制的超镁铁质土壤并不容易(为了本文的目的,我们使用世界监管指导值的中位数-RGVs)。通常,在测试中估计可利用部分(EDTA 和 DTPA)时,移动的镍和钴浓度高于指南,而高浓度的镍也通常存在于排斥植物(也包括可食用植物)中。此外,超镁铁质地区的水通常也超过了镍和六价铬的限制。因此,可以预计超镁铁质金属存在于食物链中,并可能构成潜在的健康风险。因此,需要进行更多的研究,重点评估自然存在的镍、铬和钴的慢性高暴露对健康的潜在影响。