Mielke H W, Anderson J C, Berry K J, Mielke P W, Chaney R L, Leech M
Am J Public Health. 1983 Dec;73(12):1366-9. doi: 10.2105/ajph.73.12.1366.
Soil samples were randomly collected from 422 vegetable gardens in a study area centered in downtown Baltimore, Maryland, and having a radius of 48.28 km (30 miles). The levels of lead, four other metals (cadmium, copper, nickel, and zinc), and pH were measured for each location. The application of multi-response permutation procedures, which are compatible with mapping techniques, reveals that lead (as well as cadmium, copper, nickel, and zinc) is concentrated and ubiquitous within the soils of the inner-city area of Metropolitan Baltimore. The probability values that the concentration of metals occurred by chance alone vary from about 10(-15) to 10(-23) depending on the metal considered. Our findings pose environmental and public health issues, especially to children living within the inner-city.
在以马里兰州巴尔的摩市中心为中心、半径为48.28公里(30英里)的研究区域内,从422个菜园中随机采集土壤样本。测量了每个地点的铅、其他四种金属(镉、铜、镍和锌)含量以及pH值。与绘图技术兼容的多响应排列程序的应用表明,铅(以及镉、铜、镍和锌)在巴尔的摩大都市内城区的土壤中集中且普遍存在。仅因偶然因素导致金属浓度出现的概率值,根据所考虑的金属不同,约在10^(-15)到10^(-23)之间。我们的研究结果提出了环境和公共卫生问题,尤其是对居住在内城区的儿童而言。