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Metal pollutants in agricultural soils and the St. Louis urban rainfall anomaly
Authors:Donald F. Gatz  Janyce Bartlett  John J. Hassett
Affiliation:1. Atmospheric Sciences Section, Illinois State Water Survey, P.O. Box 232, 61801, Urbana, IL, USA
2. Department of Agronomy, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 61801, Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract:The existence of a rainfall anomaly downwind of the St. Louis urban-industrial areas prompted a survey of area soils for elevated heavy metal concentrations. The goals of this work were to measure concentrations of Zn, Cd, and Ph, and to evaluate the role of the urban rainfall anomaly in their accumulation, in potentially-affected soils. Samples from three soil layers were collected from agricultural fields at 21 sites along two NE-SW transects. The samples were analyzed for pH, texture, cation exchange capacity, and total organic carbon, in addition to the three metals. The highest metal concentrations were observed near Granite City, Illinois, and coincided with an area of maximum Zn deposition in rain found in an earlier study. Only slight increases of the metals over background were found in the area of rainfall anomaly. Present rates of atmospheric deposition can account for these slightly elevated metal concentrations. However, the maximum concentrations found near Granite City cannot be accounted for by present atmospheric deposition rates. Other kinds of sources, or larger atmospheric deposition rates, perhaps during the operation of a local Zn smelter which closed about 1960, must have contributed.
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