Search results for " moss bags"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Active Moss biomonitoring of mercury in the mine-polluted area of Mt. Amiata (Central Italy)

2015

In the winter 2013, mercury concentrations in air from the mine-polluted area of Mt. Amiata (1738 m a.s.l.), in southern Tuscany (Central Italy), were measured by active moss biomonitoring. This area is part of the geologic anomaly of Hg in the Mediterranean basin, which contains about 65 % of the world’s cinnabar (HgS). Mt. Amiata covers some 400 km2 and is drained by several rivers. Esploitation activity at Abbadia S. Salvatore, in the SE sector of the mountain, sprang up during the 19th century as one of the largest mercury mining and smelting plants in Europe, after those of Almaden Spain. In this area, Sphagnum moss bags were exposed for about two months, from October to December 2013.…

Mt. Amiata biomonitoring moss bags mercury trace elementsSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Application of the moss bag biomonitoring technique in an active volcanic environment (Mt. Etna, Italy).

2011

This paper presents the preliminary results of a biomonitoring study based on the use of moss bags exposed at 24 sites on Etna volcano. Sphagnum mosses were used to study bioaccumulation originating from atmospheric deposition, by measuring the tissue contents of major and a large suite of trace elements. Elements, such as Tl, Bi, As, Se, Cu and Cd, display high concentrations in the exposed samples close to the active vents. This study confirms the effectiveness of the moss bags technique also in active volcanic areas.

biomonitoring moss bags Mt. Etna volcanic emissions trace elementsSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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