Search results for "Soil"

showing 10 items of 3493 documents

Contamination from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the soil of a botanic garden localized next to a former manufacturing gas plant in Pale…

2010

The Botanical Garden lies within the city of Palermo, a few meters away from one of the largest unused Manufacturing Gas Plant in Sicily. The total concentrations of PAHs (23 compounds) in the soil of Botanical Garden ranged from 947 to 18,072 microg/kg. The wide range of PAH concentrations (RSD=84%) found in the soil samples indicates heterogeneous levels of contamination in the area and this can be explained by considering the different tree distributions which prevents the homogeneous deposition of pollutants on the soil. Soils collected in the Botanical Garden generally showed the highest PAH concentrations, being almost 2-3 times higher than the concentration samples obtained in the ur…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPersistent organic pollutantEnvironmental EngineeringSoil testHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisGCMS Organic contaminants CarcinogeniMonitoring Botanic garden PalermoIndustrial WasteSoil classificationPollutionSoil contaminationSettore CHIM/12 - Chimica Dell'Ambiente E Dei Beni CulturaliDeposition (aerosol physics)chemistryItalyEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceSoil PollutantsOrganic matterBotanical gardenPolycyclic CompoundsGasesWaste Management and DisposalJournal of hazardous materials
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Oxygen-containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (OPAHs) in urban soils of Bratislava, Slovakia: patterns, relation to PAHs and vertical distributi…

2011

Abstract We determined concentrations, sources, and vertical distribution of OPAHs and PAHs in soils of Bratislava. The ∑14 OPAHs concentrations in surface soil horizons ranged 88–2692 ng g−1 and those of ∑34 PAHs 842–244,870 ng g−1. The concentrations of the ∑9 carbonyl-OPAHs (r = 0.92, p = 0.0001) and the ∑5 hydroxyl-OPAHs (r = 0.73, p = 0.01) correlated significantly with ∑34 PAHs concentrations indicating the close association of OPAHs with parent-PAHs. OPAHs were quantitatively dominated by 9-fluorenone, 9,10-anthraquinone, 1-indanone and benzo[a]anthracene-7,12-dione. At several sites, individual carbonyl-OPAHs had higher concentrations than parent PAHs. The concentration ratios of se…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPersistent organic pollutantSlovakiaOpahbiologyChemistryHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisGeneral MedicineToxicologybiology.organism_classificationPollutionSoilHydrocarbonEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterSoil horizonSoil PollutantsVolatile organic compoundLeaching (agriculture)Polycyclic Aromatic HydrocarbonsSubsoilUrban RenewalEnvironmental MonitoringEnvironmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
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Water-stable aggregates and organic matter pools in a calcareous vineyard soil under four soil-surface management systems

2006

. Vineyards in Champagne, France are generally situated on slopes where the soils are subject to erosion. Therefore it is important to find a soil-surface management practice that protects the soil against water erosion. We assessed the potential of mulches or grass covers to stabilize soil aggregates in a calcareous sandy loam from a vineyard in Champagne after 9 years under different management systems. Four different treatments were studied: (i) a bluegrass (Poa pratensis) surface cover between the vine rows (GC) with bare soil under the vines (R); two organic mulches of (ii) coniferous (CB) or (iii) poplar (PB) bark that covered the entire soil surface, and (iv) bare soil between the ro…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPoa pratensisbiologySoil Sciencebiology.organism_classificationVineyardPollutionAgronomychemistryLoamSoil waterBotanyErosionOrganic matterCalcareousMulchAgronomy and Crop ScienceSoil Use and Management
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Heavy metals in sewage sludges contribute to their adverse effects on the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungusGlomus mosseae

2003

Applying sewage sludges to agricultural land is a widespread practice because of the sludges’ agronomic value as a source of plant nutrients and organic matter. Nevertheless, sludges often contain micropollutants that can constitute a menace for health and the environment. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are sensitive to sewage sludges that have been spiked, or not, with metallic trace elements (MTE). Here we have investigated if MTE in sewage sludges could be responsible for effects on mycorrhizal development betweenGlomus mosseae andMedicago truncatula. The impact of a dehydrated or composted urban sewage sludge spiked or not with MTE, was tested on spore germination and root colonization by…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPollutantbiologybusiness.industryPaleontologySewagePlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationSoil contaminationNutrientchemistryAgronomySpore germinationOrganic matterbusinessSludgeGlomusFolia Geobotanica
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Remediation of Soil Contamination with Heavy Metals by Using Zeolite and Humic Acid Additives

2012

- Soil remediation at contaminated sites very often needs customized approach, because of the different content of pollutants. Various technologies from simple soil excavation and transporting to hazardous waste landfills to different kinds of remediation by vitrification and the use of additives can be used for the treatment of soil. A series of remediation experiments using zeolites and humic acids were applied to soil contaminated with copper. Remediation can be performed with easily available additive materials of natural origin found near the place of application, in order to diminish the leaching of contaminants. Soils contaminated and spiked with copper were mixed with additives, and…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPollutantchemistryWaste managementEnvironmental remediationHazardous wasteEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterHumic acidEnvironmental scienceLeaching (agriculture)ContaminationSoil contaminationLatvian Journal of Chemistry
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Decomposer animal communities in forest soil along heavy metal pollution gradient

1996

Responses of soil decomposer animals to heavy metal contamination and to concomitant changes in organic matter quality and quantity and in soil microbial biomasses have been studied along a pollution gradient from a Cu-Ni smelter. Samples have been taken separately for nematodes, enchytraeids and microarthropods 0.5, 2 and 8 km from the smelter. Special attention has been paid to the changes in the collembolan fauna. The sampling sites have been located in homogeneous Scots pine ( Pinus sylvestris) forests with podsolic soil profiles. In addition, an experiment has been carried out in which intact soil cores have been transferred in mesh baskets between the sites 2 and 8 km from the smelter…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPollutionbiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectSoil organic matterScots pine04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesEnchytraeidae010501 environmental sciences15. Life on landbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesBiochemistrySoil contaminationDecomposerAnalytical ChemistrychemistryMicrofaunaEnvironmental chemistry040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental scienceOrganic matter0105 earth and related environmental sciencesmedia_commonAnalytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry
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Organic chlorine compounds in lake sediments. V. Bottom of Baikal near a pulp mill

1990

Abstract Organically bound chlorine (OCl) together with inorganic chloride (Cl − ) was measured from bottom surface samples of the Lake Baikal near a pulp mill and compared to organic matter contents (OM). Although total contents of OCl, Cl − and OM were much lower than, the ratio of OCl to OM was of the same order of magnitude as in pulp mill recipients of Finland.

chemistry.chemical_classificationPulp millEnvironmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthEnvironmental engineeringchemistry.chemical_elementGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryPollutionChlorideSoil contaminationIndustrial waste waterchemistryEnvironmental chemistryChlorinemedicineEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterWater pollutionmedicine.drugChemosphere
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Effects of ions on water structure: a low-field1HT1NMR relaxometry approach

2014

Aqueous salt solutions play an important role in nature because of their effects on environmental biogeochemical processes and on structural properties of biomolecules. Upon dissolution, salts split in ions that are solvated. Water in hydration shells is subjected to molecular motions that can be monitored by (1)H T1 NMR relaxometry. This technique allowed the evaluation of the nature of the interactions between water and ions via variable temperature experiments. Examination of relaxometry properties of aqueous solutions at variable salt concentrations allowed acknowledgement of the role played by ions in either structuring or destructuring water aggregates. A mathematical model has been a…

chemistry.chemical_classificationRelaxometryAqueous solutionDiffusionInorganic chemistrySalt (chemistry)General ChemistryIonChaotropic agentchemistryChemical physicsSoil waterGeneral Materials ScienceDissolutionMagnetic Resonance in Chemistry
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Defoliation and the availability of currently assimilated carbon in the Phleum pratense rhizosphere

2002

Abstract It has been hypothesised that defoliation and aboveground herbivory increase the availability of currently assimilated C to organisms living in plant rhizospheres. We established a growth chamber experiment consisting of Phleum pratense individuals growing in sand culture to examine the short- and long-term effects of defoliation on the availability of current C assimilates in the P. pratense rhizosphere. Using 14CO2 pulse labelling, we followed partitioning of currently assimilated C between shoots, roots and rhizosphere-derived organic matter (RDOM). The experiment constituted of two treatments, defoliation history and recent defoliation, in a fully factorial design. Defoliation …

chemistry.chemical_classificationRhizosphereHerbivoreBiogeochemical cyclebiologySoil Sciencebiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyDecomposerPhleumchemistryAgronomyShootBotanyOrganic matterPoaceaeSoil Biology and Biochemistry
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Vibrational spectroscopy in soil and sediment analysis

2014

The literature concerning the use of vibrational spectroscopy for soil and sediment analysis, published in the last years, has been revised in order to provide a picture of the strengths and weaknesses of these direct techniques to characterize soil composition and properties. Many soil components as water, organic matter, like humic substances, and minerals, can be determined together with physicochemical parameters as pH, conductivity or redox potential. The main strategies to obtain sample spectra and to extract, as many as possible, useful information were evaluated, taking into account the progress on chemometrics and discussing the whole analytical process, from sampling to sample pre…

chemistry.chemical_classificationSediment AnalysisChemistryNear-infrared spectroscopyInfrared spectroscopySampling (statistics)Soil scienceConductivityAnalytical ChemistryChemometricsEnvironmental chemistryEnvironmental ChemistrySample preparationOrganic matterTrends in Environmental Analytical Chemistry
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