6533b835fe1ef96bd129f523

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Influence of parent material and soil use on arsenic forms in soils A case study in the Amblés Valley (Castilla-León, Spain)

L. Roca-pérezA. Sanjosé-weryC. GilJ.j. Ramos-mirasRafael BoludaNúria RocaJ.a. Rodríguez-martinP. Díaz-férnandezJaume Bech

subject

Baseline concentrationsSoil organic matterchemistry.chemical_elementcomplex mixturesWater solubleParent materialchemistryGeochemistry and PetrologySoil pHEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterAnthropogenic activitiesEconomic GeologySoil propertiesBaseline concentrationGeologyArsenic

description

Abstract The total, water soluble and extractable concentrations with EDTA of As from topsoils from the Ambles Valley (Avila, Spain) were determined. The geochemical baseline concentrations of total As were established, and the relationships between the concentration of the different As forms and soil properties were investigated. Total As content in soils was related with parent material, whereas anthropogenic activities affected its mobility. Iron, aluminium, clay content, soil organic matter and soil pH were the main controlling factors for As soil concentrations. The geochemical baseline concentrations obtained (mg kg − 1 ) were 7.3–35 in soils on granite parent material and 2.2–6.8 in soils on alluvium–colluvium parent material for total As. The baseline concentration values for the water soluble and EDTA extractable As forms were also established. For water soluble As, the baseline concentrations (mg kg − 1 ) were 0.06 for natural soils and 0.37 for agricultural and industrial soils, respectively, and the baseline concentrations for As extractable with EDTA were 0.39 mg kg − 1 .

10.1016/j.gexplo.2014.09.003https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gexplo.2014.09.003