BACKGROUND CONTENTS OF THE POTENTIALLY HA ZARDOUS ELEMENTS IN SOILS OF THE CZECH-REPUBLIC (TOTAL CONTENTS)

Citation
E. Podlesakova et al., BACKGROUND CONTENTS OF THE POTENTIALLY HA ZARDOUS ELEMENTS IN SOILS OF THE CZECH-REPUBLIC (TOTAL CONTENTS), Rostlinna vyroba, 40(12), 1994, pp. 1095-1105
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
0370663X
Volume
40
Issue
12
Year of publication
1994
Pages
1095 - 1105
Database
ISI
SICI code
0370-663X(1994)40:12<1095:BCOTPH>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
There are two reasons for the estimation of background concentrations of hazardous substances in soils and their variability: the necessity of the identification of soils contamination (exceeding of the upper b ackground limit of their variability); the correlation of the lowest l imits of ecotoxicologically relevant concentrations. The total content s of potentially hazardous elements serve as comparable links among so me levels of critical contents of trace elements in soils and as the b asis of their mobility assessments. In the set of 1 280 samples taken both in the immission-free and immission impact regions the total cont ents of As, Be, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Hg, Mn, Mo, Ni, Pb, V and Zn in Ap hor izons were determined. The total set was subdivided into 13 soil-litho logical groupings in accordance with the previous analysis of the trac e elements distribution in the soil profiles due to lithology of the p rofiles (Tab. I). Tabs II to IV comprise the geometric means and their variance of the mentioned subsets after eliminating the outliers. The data in Tab. II reflect the increasing contents of Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni and V in the sequence of soils from the transported weathered product s of acid granites, micaceous gneisses and mafic - ultramafic rocks wi th the maximum values of Be in gneisses. The last mentioned soils repr esent the most widespread geogenic anomaly in the Czech Republic; high profile trace elements concentrations of As occur in some acid rocks and of Cd (and mostly the same elements like in mafic rocks) in weathe red products of limestones and some shales (Tab. V). Tab. III gives th e significantly lowest contents of the most elements in soils derived from sands and low contents of them in soils from most sandstones and loamy albic luvisols and stagnosols (due to argilluviation). The incre asing contents of trace elements in loamy and clayey soils do not corr espond to the extent proposed for soils in the Netherlands. The fluvis ols especially from recently flooded alluvial sediments downstream the industrial cities are contaminated or even intoxicated (Cd, Hg, Pb, Z n, Cu, Cr, Mn). The contents of Cd, Hg, As and Be are more influenced (except the mentioned anomalies) by the anthropogenic inputs by parent materials. Combined sets of data are presented in Tab. IV.