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Beryllium natural background concentration and mobility: A reappraisal examining the case of high Be-bearing pyroclastic rocks

TitleBeryllium natural background concentration and mobility: A reappraisal examining the case of high Be-bearing pyroclastic rocks
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsArmiento, Giovanna, Bellatreccia F., Cremisini C., G. Ventura della, Nardi Elisa, and Pacifico R.
JournalEnvironmental Monitoring and Assessment
Volume185
Pagination559-572
ISSN01676369
Keywordsarticle, background level, Baseline concentration, Baseline levels, Beryllium, Cadmium, Chemical composition, Chromium, Climate change, concentration (composition), concentration (parameters), Concentration levels, Environmental conditions, environmental exposure, environmental management, Environmental monitoring, Environmental Pollution, geochemical analysis, Geologic Sediments, Human carcinogen, Industrial applications, Italy, Kinetics, Land managements, Land use, Leachability, Lead, Literature data, Low level, Low mobility, mobilization, Natural backgrounds, Natural elements, oxidation reduction reaction, pH measurement, physical chemistry, Pleistocene, pollution monitoring, pollution transport, pyroclastic deposit, Pyroclastic rocks, Reference Values, Risk assessment, rock, Roman Comagmatic Province, Soil, soil analysis, soil chemistry, Soil contamination, Soil Pollutants, Soil pollution, soil quality, Soils, Toxic elements, toxic substance, Volcanoes, volcanogenic deposit
Abstract

Beryllium is widely distributed in soils at low levels, but it can also occur naturally in higher concentrations in a variety of materials exploited for many industrial applications. Beryllium is also one of the most toxic natural elements and is known to be a human carcinogen. A concise account of the literature data on baseline concentrations of Be in soils illustrates the possibility of worldwide presence of areas with a high natural background concentration of Be (up to 300 mg/kg), the crustal abundance of which is generally estimated to be in the range 2-6 mg/kg. Nevertheless, the number of available data is rather limited in comparison with those about other toxic elements such as Pb, Cd and Cr. This has probably caused the choice of low values of concentration level as the reference for the definition of soil contamination: these values are not always realistic and are not applicable to large areas. As a case study, we report and analyse a diffuse, unusually high (up to 80 mg/kg, average approximately 20 mg/kg), natural occurrence of beryllium in loose and poorly consolidated pyroclastic layers related to the Pleistocene activity of the Vico volcano. Additionally, the analysis of Be leachability has been carried out, providing evidence of a not negligible mobility in contrast with the scarce data presented in the literature that usually indicate beryllium as an element with low mobility in oxidising surface environmental conditions. This research marks the beginning of a possible reappraisal of beryllium geochemical behaviour and background levels, providing more realistic reference values for risk assessment and land management. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

Notes

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84871978630&doi=10.1007%2fs10661-012-2575-3&partnerID=40&md5=6746f7ed40767bfa7b0ede42745fc449
DOI10.1007/s10661-012-2575-3
Citation KeyArmiento2013559