Potentially Toxic Elements (PTEs) Dispersion in Alluvial Deposits from Abandoned Mining Sites
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2024-03-26
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MDPI
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In the watersheds of abandoned mining districts, it is common to find remains of former
facilities and waste dams on stream banks and slopes—a situation that results in the transport and
accumulation of metal(loid)s in alluvial deposits. To analyze this problem, an area of the former
mining district of Linares–La Carolina (southern Spain) was selected to evaluate the contents and
distributions of Ag, As, Ba, Cu, and Pb as potentially toxic elements (PTEs) found in the mineral
paragenesis. Specifically, this study focused on the Siles Stream, which runs through a sector where
underground mining for the exploitation of galena veins generated abundant mining wastes, mainly
waste rock and tailings. Thirty-four sediment samples from the stream bed of the Siles Stream and
two sediment samples from the Guadiel River, of which it is a tributary, were analyzed. Floodplain
sediments were sampled in the stream banks at the middle and lower reaches (11 samples), as well as
the riverine soils developed at the mouth of the Siles Stream (22 samples). The analyzed samples
presented high levels of PTEs, in most cases with values much higher than the generic reference levels
established by European and regional legislation for PTEs in soils. In the case of Pb, the main metal
mined in this district, contents of up to 27,074 mg kg1 were observed in the stream bed sediments.
Very high concentrations of Pb also appeared in the floodplain sediments, with maximum values in
the middle course of the stream, where the concentration reached 43,692 mg kg1. With respect to the
sediments of the Guadiel river bed, the Pb content was 699 mg kg1 before the confluence with the
stream and 2537 mg kg1 downstream, which clearly reflects the influence of the contributions from
the Siles Stream. The enrichment factors (EFs) show that the sediments present a severe to very severe
anthropogenic influence for Ag, As, Ba, Cu, and Pb. The geoaccumulation index (Igeo) indicates that
the entire basin is extremely polluted by Pb, to which As and Ag are added in the middle course
of the stream. The potential ecological risk index (RI) and pollution load index (PLI) based on the
contamination factor (CF) suggested that metal loads far exceeded the reference values. Selective
chemical extraction methods were used to assess the potential bioavailability of these elements in
sediment and soil samples. The results showed high concentrations of Pb in the exchangeable fraction,
which poses a significant ecological risk and potential human health risks.
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lead mining, pollution, metal(loid)s, bioavailability, alluvial sediments, riverine soils