2009
DOI: 10.1007/bf03326092
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Relationship between geomorphology and contamination with weathered hydrocarbons in an old river levee/marsh association

Abstract: ABSTRACT:A site evaluation was made for a low-lying property in an old river levee/marsh association, used marginally for cattle raising, which was contaminated due to historical practices. Contamination was related to geomorphology: the lowest areas contained 79 % of the contaminated samples. Other contaminated samples were all rear access roads (probable intentional dumping). There were no samples in the higher, levee areas away from roads with hydrocarbon concentrations above 3,000 mg/kg. Medium and high im… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Some organic constituents of livestock wastewater are very persistent, often remaining even after a series of biological treatments (Adams et al, 2009). Chemical oxidation process using strong oxidation agents is a good option for removing non-biodegradable organic compounds from biologically-treated effluent (Oeller and Demel, 1997;Arslan and Balcioglu, 2001;Yasar et al, 2007;Tambosi et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some organic constituents of livestock wastewater are very persistent, often remaining even after a series of biological treatments (Adams et al, 2009). Chemical oxidation process using strong oxidation agents is a good option for removing non-biodegradable organic compounds from biologically-treated effluent (Oeller and Demel, 1997;Arslan and Balcioglu, 2001;Yasar et al, 2007;Tambosi et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Dhanasekaran et al, 2009;Chukwuma et al, 2010;Refaat, 2010) Because of these alterations and potential threat to public health and the environment, some forms of remediation become imperative. Physicochemical technologies have been used for ages for the treatment or disposal of soils contaminated with petroleum products (Adams et al, 2009;Yousefi Kebria et al, 2009 (Less and Senior, 1995;Vidali, 2001). These limitations include: they are expensive to implement at full scale, they are not environmentally friendly, their technologies are complex and they lead to destruction of soil texture and characteristics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is unlikely that this large reduction in toxicity (100 % mortality to 3-13% mortality) is only a result of the modest additional reduction in hydrocarbon concentration (from 1.3% to 0.8%). In similar work on weathered petroleum in clayey soils, this level of reduction hydrocarbon concentration has only resulted in a corresponding reduction in toxicity of about 30% (Adams et al, 2009). It is possible that this last chemical oxidation step also finally transformed some unknown drilling fluid additive into a substantially less toxic compound, greatly reduced its concentration, or reduced its bioavailability to earthworms in contact.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%