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Environmental problems - Chemical approaches
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Environmental Chemistry

Environmental Chemistry

Volume 21 Number 2 2024

EN23037Effect of wetting and drying processes on ultramafic and mafic tailing minerals amended with topsoil

Lewis Fausak 0000-0003-3701-8653, Anne Joseph 0000-0002-3440-2679, Ana C. Reinesch 0000-0002-2008-8981, Skylar Kylstra 0000-0001-6454-5972, Fernanda Diaz Osorio 0009-0000-7986-5514, Autumn Watkinson 0000-0002-2831-6248 and Les Lavkulich 0000-0001-9654-6574

Environmental context. Mine tailings are a mixture of fine materials obtained after crushing, processing and extracting the valuable minerals from ore. Ultramafic and mafic mine tailings have the potential to mineralise carbon, offering a solution to offset greenhouse gas emissions from the mining sector. The study revealed that the effects of wetting and drying ultramafic and mafic mine tailings under atmospheric conditions have the potential for carbon sequestration and acid mine drainage.

EN23114Effects of arsenite and dimethylarsenic on the growth and health of hydroponically grown commercial Doongara rice

Hayden P. Martin, William A. Maher 0000-0001-7564-3383, Peter Snell, Kim J. Philpot and Michael J. Ellwood 0000-0003-4288-8530

Environmental context. Arsenic’s effect on rice plant health is a critical environmental issue. This study reveals that rice plants absorb inorganic arsenic and dimethylarsenic differently, with dimethylarsenic posing a greater threat to rice plant health. These findings contribute to our understanding of arsenic toxicity in plants, highlighting the need for further research into detoxification strategies for dimethylarsenic.

EN23093Natural cobalt–manganese oxide nanoparticles: speciation, detection and implications for cobalt cycling

Owen P. Missen 0000-0002-2121-9971, Stuart J. Mills, Thebny Thaise Moro, E. Eduardo Villalobos-Portillo 0000-0003-4344-4181, Hiram Castillo-Michel, Thomas E. Lockwood 0000-0001-7030-1341, Raquel Gonzalez de Vega and David Clases

Photograph of waste rock dumps and former mine infrastructure at Mount Cobalt, Queensland.

Environmental context.  Cobalt is a technologically critical element due to its uses in the green energy transition, but its cycling is poorly constrained in surface environments. We determined the form of cobalt in naturally enriched soils and found that it is commonly associated with manganese as mixed oxide nanoparticles. These findings demonstrate that the behaviour of critical elements such as cobalt in the environment is in part governed at the nanoscale. (Photograph by O. P. Missen, 11 July 2022.)

EN23116Distribution, speciation, mobility and ecological risk of potentially toxic elements in dust and PM2.5 from abandoned mining areas

Zhaoying Shen, Hong Huang, Yujie Jiang, Yuan Tang, Changwei Zou 0000-0002-9760-3486, Jianlong Li, Chenglong Yu and Fangxu Zhu

Environmental context. Dust is a heterogeneous material deposited on the ground surface and is a source and sink for potentially toxic elements (PTEs) originating from the air and soil. Tracking the distribution and effects of PTEs in an abandoned mining area is critical as few studies have quantified the speciation and bioavailability of PTEs contained in dust and PM2.5. In this paper, we track the distribution of PTEs in an abandoned mining area, quantifying the mobility of PTEs using the speciation of PTEs in dust and PM2.5 and quantitatively assess the environmental and ecological risks of PTE in a mining area.

Environmental context. This study investigates how rare earth elements (REEs), such as europium (Eu), bind to organic matter. We are also gaining valuable insights into how these elements affect the structure of the organic matter that controls their mobility in natural systems, helping us to better understand the broader processes that govern the behaviour of trace metals in the environment.

This article belongs to the collection Dedication to Prof. Edward Tipping.

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