Title: 13. The Geologic Aspects of Environmental Health
113. The Geologic Aspects of Environmental Health
- Lecture outline
- Introduction to Environmental Health
- Some Geologic Factors of Environmental Health
- Trace Elements in Health
- Chronic Disease and Geologic Environment
- Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Risk Assessment in Toxicology
- Case Study Arsenic in Ganges
2Introduction to Environmental Health
- Geologic dimensions of the complex relationship
between disease and environment - Trace elements vary in abundance between soils,
surficial deposits, bedrock - Micronutrients
- Toxic
- Radioactivity in rocks, gases (e.g., radon)
- Water carries contaminants derived from geologic
processes - Dissolved
- Particulate
3Some Geologic Factors of Environmental Health
- Living tissue is composed primarily of 11
(bulk) elements O, C, H, N, Ca, P, S, K, Na,
Cl, Mg - Living tissue also requires minute levels of
several other (trace) elements Fl, Cr, Mn, Co,
Cu, Zn, Se, Mo, I - Other (age) elements accumulate in tissue with
age Ni, As, Al, Ba, Pb - Some elements not known to be essential to human
life Ti
4Some Geologic Factors of Environmental Health
- Important to understand biogeochemical processes
of rock cycle weathering, cementation - Mud and mud-derived rocks (e.g., shales,
mudstones, slates, schist) - Adequate amounts of most micronutrients (and
non-essential elements) - Cations and anions are readily adsorbed on clays
and organics - Some black (organic-rich) shale well known for
unusually high abundances of U, Zn, Se, others
5Some Geologic Factors of Environmental Health
- Granites and rhyolites may be strongly enriched
in Mo, Sn, Be, rb - Granite pegmatites high in Be, B, Li
- Clean, quartz sandstones low in trace elements
- contain some (Zr, Ti, B) but locked-up in
insoluble minerals zircon, rutile, tourmaline - Not available to soil microflora, microfauna,
plants
6Some Geologic Factors of Environmental Health
- Intermediate silica-content igneous rocks
(andesite, diorite) good balance of trace
elements - Mafic basalts and gabbros
- Elevated content of Co, Ni, Se, Cr
- Depleted in Zn, Mo
- Soils derived from olivine/Mg-silicate bedrock
(dunite, serpentine - Severe deficiencies in Ca, K, essential
micronutrients - May contain near-toxic levels of Cr
7Some Geologic Factors of Environmental Health
- Bioavailability
- If not tightly bound in insoluble mineral grains
controlled by soil moisture pH - When soil moisture is acid most metal cations
have enhanced mobility (immobile in alkaline
soils) - Se Mo more soluble in alkaline soils and water
- Mercury subject to biomagnification
- 60,000 children born each year in USA with
elevated concentrations of Hg (NAS) - 41 states have issued advisories on eating fish
from Hg-contaminated waters
8Trace Elements in Health
- Dose-response curve
- Optimum concentrations
- Two thresholds at which harmful conditions begin
9Trace Elements in Health
- Toxic dose-response curve
- TD-50 concentration at which 50 of population
experiences a particular symptom (e.g., disease,
death)
10Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of fluorine
- Calcium fluoride helps prevent tooth decay helps
form large-resistant crystals of apatite (calcium
phosphate) in teeth and bones - Can reduce osteoporosis
- Fairly abundant in rocks esp. volcanic ash
11Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of iodine
- Thyroid gland (at base of neck) requires iodine
to function - Lack of iodine causes goiter tumor causing
enlargement of thyroid gland - Can cause stunted growth and mental disability in
children born to mothers with iodine deficiency - Treat deficiency with iodize salt
12Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of zinc
- Zinc is essential for plant (crop) growth
affects yields, seed development - Low in areas with strongly leached soils Coastal
Plain of NC, GA, FL - Also low in states with aeolian sand cover Zn
not transported as readily as quartz sand - Zn deficiencies in human lung cancer, arterial
disease
13Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of lead
- Each year 12,000-16,000 American children under
age 9 are treated for acute lead poisoning - about 200 die
- 30 of survivors suffer from palsy, partial
paralysis, blindness, mental impairment - Can cause damage to unborn fetuses
- High in shales, Boone Fm (Mississippian-age
limestone) ore replaces limestone in zones
sphalerite (ZnS) and galena (PbS) are commercial
minerals
14Trace Elements in Health
15Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of selenium
- Found in elemental form in metallic or
crystalline form odorless and tasteless - In gaseous form smells like garlic (one form is
very toxic hydrogen selenide) - Use in insecticides and in paint for ships
(prevents growth of barnacles) - Photoelectric properties make it useful in light
meters, electronic eyes - Steel industry uses Se for strength, corrosion
resistance - Used as rubber vulcanizer, dandruff control
shampoo, to color glass red or pink
16Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of selenium
- Beneficial to animals at 0.04 to 0.1
- More problems from deficiency than from excess
- Toxic gt 4 ppm
- negative reputation from animal affliction known
as blind staggers muscular dystrophy) - 1907-08 15,000 sheep died north of Medicine Bow
(assumed to be caused by plants with seleniferous
vegetation (but no pathology report to confirm - Use for humans to reduce toxic effects of excess
Cd, As - May be useful as antioxidant and anticancer agent
- Se poisoning rare in humans drinking water
standard is 10 ppm
17Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of selenium
- Found in volcanic tuff, coal deposits, marine
shales - Not readily available if soils are acidic (e.g.,
Hawaii) - In alkaline conditions subject to
biomagnification by selenium concentrating plants
(e.g., woody aster, milk vetch) has been found
up to 15,000 ppm - Seleniferous soils derived from Cretaceous-age
marine shales bound with clay and iron oxides - In WY Cody Shale, Steele Shale, Niobrara Fm.,
Browns Park Fm. - Because Se accumulates in organic material found
in fossil fuels (e.g., coal)
18Trace Elements in Health
- Imbalance of selenium
- Similar to S
- Se S can replace each other in compounds
- Same symptoms can be produced by S and Se
- Oxidized groundwater dissolves U, Se, As
deposited with change to reducing conditions
roll-front deposits - When oxidized Se adsorbed on clays, iron oxides,
organic particles can find Se enriched fluvial
and lake deposits
19Chronic Disease and Geologic Environment
- Heart disease and the geochemical environment
- Related to chemistry (esp. hardness) of drinking
water - Hardness function of Ca Mg (if low water is
soft) - Communities with soft water have higher rates of
heart disease (e.g., stroke blockage/rupture of
blood vessel in brain) - Possible mechanisms (cause-and-effect not
confirmed) - Soft water is acidic ? corrode pipes ? release
trace elements - Some substances dissolved in hard water may help
prevent heart disease
20Chronic Disease and Geologic Environment
- Japan stroke related to sulfate bicarbonate
- In sulfur-rich volcanic rocks in NE Japan low
Ca, Mg, bicarbonate but high sulfate - In sedimentary rocks high Ca, Mg, bicarbonate
(hard water)
21Chronic Disease and Geologic Environment
- Ohio
- Sulfate-rich drinking water from coal-bearing
rocks in SE Ohio - Low sulfate/high bicarbonate in waters drainage
glacial deposits
22Chronic Disease and Geologic Environment
- Georgia
- High death rates from cardiovascular disease
high Zr in strongly-leached clays sands - Low death rates abundant trace elements known to
protect from CVDMn, Cr, V, Cu
23Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Nature of radioactivity
- Elements substances that cannot be changed into
other substances by ordinary chemical means - Atoms have nucleus of protons neutrons
surrounded by orbiting electrons - Entire weight is in nucleus so atomic mass
protons neutrons - Atomic number protons (unique for each
element) - Atom smallest part of an element that can exist
alone or in combination with other elements
24Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Nature of radioactivity
- Atoms can gain or lose electrons form ions ( or
charge) - Isotopes forms of an element with different
atomic mass (238U vs. 235U both have atomic
number 92) - Radioactive isotope (radioisotope) undergoes
spontaneous nuclear change while emitting one or
more forms of radiation - Alpha particles 2 protons 2 neutrons (massive,
slow, low penetration of solids) - Beta particles energetic electrons
- Gamma radiation highest energy, travel far
fast, deep penetration of solids)
25Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- The health danger from radioactive radiation
- Depends on kind of radiation, where exposure
occurs, half-life of isotope, physical/chemical
state - Radon-222 low energy, short half-life, dangerous
because it is a gas - Alpha radiation dangerous only when
alpha-emitting isotope is inhaled or ingested
stopped by body tissue w/I short distance - Gamma rays dangerous inside or outside of body
(need shielding for protection)
26Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- The health danger from radioactive radiation
- Dose of 5000 millisieverts lethal to all exposed
people - Dose from 1000-2000 mSv causes vomiting, fatigue,
miscarriages - Maximum allowable dose for workers 50 mSv ( 30x
avg. background radiation from all sources) - Maximum permissible for general public 5 mSv (
3x avg. background radiation)
27Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Background radiation
- depends on elevation and bedrock
- High gamma radiation in mountain states vs. low
at sea level - Granite rocks contain more radioactive minerals
vs. low in limestone - From rocks/soil avg. 0.35 millisieverts/person/ye
ar
28Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Radon gas
- Naturally occurring radioactive gas colorless,
tasteless, odorless - Radioactive decay of U-238 produces Ra which
decays to Ra-222-226 - Look for U-bearing rocks
- Elevated concentrations known to cause lung
cancer up to 30,000 deaths/year in USA
29Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Radon gas
- Radon activity in different environmental settings
30Radioactivity and Radon Gas
31Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Geology of radon gas
- High in some dark shales some granites
- Reading Prong area in PA-NJ-NY famous for high
radon gas - Geologic faults commonly enriched w/ U
- Movement of radon gas attenuated by high soil
moisture - Radon Hot Springs, NM
32Radioactivity and Radon Gas
- Hazard from radon gas
- Enters homes through
- Cracks/seeps in walls, basements
- Groundwater pumped into homes
- Construction materials made of substances that
emit radon gas - Est. 1 in 7 homes in USA may have elevated levels
of radon gas
33Risk Assessment in Toxicology
- Steps to take in risk assessment
- Hazard identification will exposure cause health
problems? - Dose-response assessment
- Exposure assessment duration, frequency,
intensity of exposure - Risk characterization compare risk of exposure
(from 3 steps above) to legal, social, political,
economic, technical issues involved in mitigation
34Case Study Arsenic Contamination in the
Groundwater of West Bengal, India, and Bangladesh
- India
- Pop 1 Billion
- Area 3,287,590 km2
- Life Expectancy 62.5 yrs
- Bangladesh
- Pop 123 Million
- Area 147,570 km2
- Life Expectancy 58 yrs
35Why Study Arsenic Contamination?
36Why Study Arsenic Contamination?
37Why Study Arsenic Contamination?
38Effects of Arsenic Contamination
- Melanosis
- Leucomelanosis
- Keratosis
- Hyperkeratosis
- Dorsum
- Nonpetting Oedema
- Gangrene
- Can lead to internal cancers
39Background
- Surface water in India and Bangladesh contains
bacterial contamination not sanitary
- Water wells were drilled to provide fresh
drinking water as early as 1960
40The Problem
- West Bengal, India
- Wells drilled into pyrite-coated alluvial
sediments of the Ganges River Alluvium and Delta
deposits for municipal and agricultural use - Skin lesions and other diseases began to appear
- As a result, the School of Environmental Studies
(SOES), Jadavpur University, India conducted
research in the West Bengal district -
41The Problem
West Bengal, India
- 20,000 water wells were analyzed
- 45 of the wells reported As levels above .05
mg/l - Avg. As concentration of the wells .20 mg/l
42The Problem
West Bengal, India
- 34 million within contaminated districts
- Up to 20 of population could show signs of As
contamination
43The Problem
- While studying As contamination in West Bengal,
India, the SOES discovered As contamination in
neighboring Bangladesh - Contaminated sediment was found to be
Plio-Pleistocene age that also extended into
Bangladesh
44The Problem
- Bangladesh
- 34 out of 64 districts have plio-Pleistocene
sediments - 27 of the 34 districts tested () for As
contamination
45The AnswerWhat caused the As contamination?
- During Plio-Pleistocene times, sediment was
deposited in the Ganges River delta that
contained arsenic in the form of mineral deposits
(As-rich Fe oxyhydroxide) - Two Possible Theories
- Drawdown causes O2 from the atmosphere to
infiltrate into the aquifer and allows oxidation
of As bearing Pyrite (releasing As into the
groundwater) - As is released from the reductive dissolution of
As-rich iron oxyhydroxide (FeOOH)
46The Answer
- Nickson et al (2000) proved that the cause of As
contamination was by the reductive dissolution of
As-rich Fe oxyhydroxide coated sediments
4FeOOH CH2O 7 H2CO3
4Fe2 8HCO3- 6H2O
- In areas where high As levels are found, there
are also high amounts of bicarbonate
47The Solution
- The short-term solution is to aerate the water
and filter the As through fresh sediment at each
well-site
48Retrospect
- In some cases, skin lesions persisted up to 10
years after As contamination ceased - As contamination will remain a problem in India
and Bangladesh for many years