Ikingura J R, Akagi H
University of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
Sci Total Environ. 1996 Nov 18;191(1-2):59-68. doi: 10.1016/0048-9697(96)05178-9.
Monitoring of environmental and human exposure to mercury in the Nungwe Bay area of the Lake Victoria goldfields, Tanzania, has revealed low mercury concentrations in fish (range: 1.8-16.9 ppb, mean: 7.0 ppb) and human hair (range: 156-5433 ppb, mean: 947 ppb) that represent background levels. Gold mining has not produced a significant increase in environmental methylmercury that is available for bioaccummulation in aquatic food chains. Urinary mercury levels in gold mine workers frequently exposed to Hg vapour in amalgamation and burning of amalgam were significantly higher (mean: 241 ng/ml) than those in the general mine population not occupational exposed to Hg (mean: 2.6 ng/ml). Rotation of mine duties reduced Hg exposure levels and hence the risk of intoxication in the gold mine workers. The lowest urinary and hair mercury levels were found in the Nungwe Bay fishing village population. This was consistent with the low mercury content of fish consumed by the inhabitants of the Nungwe Bay.
对坦桑尼亚维多利亚湖金矿田农圭湾地区环境和人类汞暴露情况的监测显示,鱼类中的汞浓度较低(范围:1.8 - 16.9 ppb,平均:7.0 ppb),人发中的汞浓度也较低(范围:156 - 5433 ppb,平均:947 ppb),这些代表了背景水平。金矿开采并未导致环境中可在水生食物链中生物累积的甲基汞显著增加。在汞齐化和燃烧汞齐过程中经常接触汞蒸气的金矿工人,其尿汞水平(平均:241 ng/ml)显著高于未职业接触汞的普通矿区人群(平均:2.6 ng/ml)。轮岗作业降低了金矿工人的汞暴露水平,从而降低了中毒风险。农圭湾渔村人口的尿汞和发汞水平最低。这与农圭湾居民食用的鱼类汞含量低是一致的。