Refinar búsqueda
Resultados 11-20 de 2,291
Simulation of the long-term soil response to acid deposition in various buffer ranges.
1989
Vries W. de | Posch M. | Kaemaeri J.
Kinetic constraints on the in-situ remediation of soils contaminated with organic chemicals.
1995
Beck A.J. | Jones K.C.
Critical loads for nitrogen deposition on forest ecosystems.
1989
Schulze E.D. | Vries W. de | Hauhs M. | Rosen K. | Rasmussen L. | Tamm C.O. | Nilsson J.
Metal plant and soil pollution indexes.
1987
Romero F. | Elejalde C. | Azpiazu M.N.
Heavy metal uptake by wheat seedlings grown in fly ash-amended soils.
1987
Petruzzelli G. | Lubrano L. | Cervelli S.
Effect of pH on chemical forms and plant availability of cadmium, zinc, and lead in polluted soils.
1989
Xian X.F. | Shokohifard G.I.
Fate of spilled xylene as influenced by soil moisture content.
1987
Aurelius M.W. | Brown K.W.
Ozone, acidic precipitation, and soil Mg impacts on soil and loblolly pine seedling nutrient status after three growing seasons.
1992
Edwards G.S. | Kelly J.M. | Mays P.A.
Dissolved organic carbon in the unsaturated zone under land irrigated by wastewater effluent.
1990
Amiel A.J. | Magaritz M. | Ronen D. | Lindstrand O.
Fate of metal-associated POM in a soil under arable land use contaminated by metallurgical fallout in northern France.
2007
Labanowski, Jérôme | Sebastia, Julien | Foy, Eddy | Jongmans, Toine | Lamy, Isabelle | van Oort, Folkert, F. | Unité de recherche Science du Sol (USS) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) | Laboratoire Pierre Süe (LPS) ; Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut de Chimie - CNRS Chimie (INC-CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) | Laboratory of Soil Science and Geology ; Alterra Wageningen University and Research Centre
International audience | Organic matter is a major metal-retaining constituent in soils. Among the diversity of organic components in soils, particulate organic matter (POM) accumulates large amounts of metals, but the fate of such metal-associated POM is unknown. We studied different POM size fractions and their corresponding mineral size-fractions isolated from the surface horizon of a soil affected by metallurgical fallout. Analyses of total and EDTA extractible metal contents performed on all size fractions demonstrated that with decreasing POM size, larger metal concentrations were observed but they were less extractable. Micromorphological study revealed the occurrence of opaque parts in decaying POM fragments and their individualization as fine, irregularly shaped opaque fragments in the soil matrix. This work suggested a mutual sequestration of metal pollutants and organic carbon as micro-meter sized, metal-enriched organic particles derived from POM, representing an original pathway for natural attenuation of risk related to metal contaminated soils. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]