Title: Human Health Effects from Cyanide, Mercury and Arsenic
1Human Health Effects from Cyanide, Mercury and
Arsenic
- Western Mining Action Network
- September 29, 2007
- Amy Crook
- Centre for Science in Public Participation
- Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
- 250 721-3627
- acrook_at_csp2.org
2How Are People Exposed to Toxic Chemicals?
- Industry discharges into air, water and food
- Major toxins discharged at mine sites are
Mercury, Arsenic, Cyanide, Lead, Zinc, Cadmium,
and others - Dispersion of chemicals is global we all live
downstream
3Basic Toxicology Exposure-related Concepts
- Metals
- Persist in the environment forever
- Can bioconcentrate in our food and bodies
- Can cause damage with transient exposures
4Primary Routes of Exposure
5Who is most impacted from toxins?
- Those with highest exposure-workers and their
families - Those who live closest to the source
- Those who fish/hunt from contaminated areas
- Those with the most vulnerability-pregnant women,
infants, children, sick and elderly - Even transient exposures can have significant
toxic impact
6Child Health Exposures
- Prenatal
- -transplacental
- -developmental windows
- Postnatal
- pound per pound children eat, drink and breath
far more than adults - prolonged gastric emptying
- increased metabolic rate
- increased time indoors and on floors
- breast milk (still best to breastfeed, but breast
milk now contains many contaminants)
7Why dont we know more about toxic impacts?
- Good data hard to get and large scale
epidemiology studies are rare - Cant dose people with toxins and look at the
response - Data comes from accidents/spills- not a
controlled lab setting w/good study design - There is a long latency window between exposure
and affect
8Why dont we know more about toxic impacts?
- People are exposed to a mixture of toxins, not
one at a time. - Toxicity tests are designed to measure the
effects of one toxin at a time, dont reflect
reality. - Interactive effects of toxins are important, but
few studies look at chemical mixtures. - Exposure rates are hard to measure in
uncontrolled situations. - Precautionary approach needed in estimating
toxicity and allowing the discharge of toxic
compounds.
9 An Overview of Mercury
Wet Deposition
Particulates Vapor
Combustion
Dry Deposition
Volcanoes
Industry Incinerators
Landfills
Farming
WasteWater Releases
Ground-water Flow
Volatilization
Pesticides Fertilizers
Runoff
Methylation Hg to HgCH3
Rain Streams to Groundwater
Sedimentation
to Streams, lakes, vegetation, soil
Bioaccumulation in Fish
10Mercury Effects of Higher Dose Prenatal Exposure
- Mental retardation
- Seizures
- Cerebral palsy
- Disturbances of vision, hearing, sensation
- Abnormal gait
- Abnormal speech
- Disturbances of swallowing and sucking
- Abnormal reflexes
11MercuryDeclining Threshold of Harm
Level associated with
harmful effect
Regulatory standard
(maximum safe exposure or high
end exposure from allowed fish
contamination)
(micrograms/kg/day Hg)
DAILY INTAKE
FDA
WHO
ATSDR
EPA
YEAR
12Mercury Exposures
- Advised Exposure Limit
- EPA Reference Dose (safe upper limit) 0.1
microgram/kilogram/day - Equivalent consumption limit
- Women 1.5 oz. swordfish or 7 oz. tuna/week
- Child 1 oz. tuna per 20 lb. body weight/week
13Environmental Concerns of Mercury
- Methylmercury bioaccumulation in fish
- Elevated concentrations build up in river
reservoirs above dams - Previous mercury mining has left a legacy of
tremendous health impacts. Tl'azt'en First Nation
impacts from old Teck Cominco mine at Lake
Pinchi. - Large sources of mercury come from roasters at
gold mines and from active cyanide heap leaches.
14Are the current standards protective?
- Thresholds of harm for As, Hg Cn
- Is policy keeping up with the science?
- Compounded effects from multiple exposures and
toxic mixtures - Chemicals we dont even know yet
- Cumulative impacts from other factors nutrition,
genetics, social, cultural, economic
15How to assess if your community is at risk
- Attend the workshop by Sue Moodie, Lisa Sumi and
Catherine Coumans Health Assessment for Mining
Affected Communities Workshop, Sunday afternoon.
16Questions to ask mining companies
- How much dust will be generated? Where will it
go? Whats in it? Will it affect harvest areas,
play areas, yards, haul roads, etc? - Where will the waste water be discharged? Whats
in it? Will it affect fish, wildlife, recreation
and sacred areas? - Where are the transportation routes for hauling
ore, hazardous materials, and fuels? Are they
close to homes, communities? Are the current
roads capable of handling the extra traffic and
weight? What are the plans to upgrade and
maintain the road? Who pays for that? - How will ore and hazardous materials spills be
handled? Are the response plans and notification
procedures adequate? Who pays for the clean up?
17References
- Toxic impacts
- Sandra Steingraber. 2001. Having Faith- An
Ecologists Journey to Motherhood. Perseus
Publishing. Cambridge, Massachusetts. - Daniel Peplow, Robert Edmonds. The effects of
mine waste contamination at multiple levels of
biological organization. Elsevier Ecological
Engineering 24 (2005) 101119. - Mercury
- Leonardo Trasande, Philip J. Landrigan, and Clyde
Schechter. Public Health and Economic
Consequences of Methyl Mercury Toxicity to the
Developing Brain. Environmental Health
Perspectives Volume 113, Number 5, May 2005.
http//www.mineralpolicy.org/mercury.cfm - LA Times, March 17, 2005. Possible Mercury,
Autism Connection Found in Study.Thomas H. Maugh
II Texas researchers have found a possible link
between autism and mercury in the air and water. - Reno Gazette-jounal, April 14, 2007. Researchers
at UNR to study mining waste link to mercury.
Jeff DeLong.
18References
- Chan HM, Receveur. Environmental Pollution. 2000
Oct110(1)1-2. Mercury in the traditional diet
of indigenous peoples in Canada. Centre for
Indigenous Peoples' Nutrition and Environment,
McGill University Quebec, Canada. - Hansen JC, Gilman AP. Int J Circumpolar Health.
2005 Apr64(2)121-36. Exposure of Arctic
populations to methylmercury from consumption of
marine food an updated risk-benefit assessment.
Centre for Arctic Environmental Medicine (CAM),
University of Aarhus, Denmark. - Stephen C. Jewett, Lawrence K. Duffy. Mercury in
fishes of Alaska, with emphasis on subsistence
species. Science Direct, STOTEN-10138 No of
Pages 25. www.sciencedirect.com - Environmental Protection Agency. Mercury Study
Report to Congress An Assessment of Exposure
to Mercury in the United States. Vol IV, 1997.
http//www.epa.gov/ttnuatw1/112nmerc/volume4.pdf - Environmental Protection Agency. Mercury Update
Impact on Fish Advisories. EPA-823-F-99-016
September 1999. http//www.epa.gov/ostwater/fish/m
ercury.html
19References
- Greg Jones and Glenn Miller. October, 2005
Mercury and Modern Gold Mining in Nevada.
University of Nevada, Reno, NV - Great Basin Mine Watch, Idaho Conservation League
and Earthworks. August 2006. Three Nevada Gold
Mines Grossly Under-Report Mercury Air Emissions. - Cyanide
- Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
(ATSDR). 2006. Toxicological Profile for Cyanide.
Atlanta, GA U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Public Health Service.
.