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Discrimination of topsoil environments in a karst landscape: an outcome of a geochemical mapping campaign.

Ozren HasanSlobodan MikoNikolina IlijanićDea BrunovićŽeljko DedićMartina Šparica MikoZoran Peh
Published in: Geochemical transactions (2020)
The study presented in this work emerged as a result of a multiyear regional geochemical survey based on low-density topsoil sampling and the ensuing geochemical atlas of Croatia. This study focuses on the Dinaric part of Croatia to expound the underlying mechanisms controlling the mobilities and variations in distribution of potentially harmful elements as observed from different environmental angles. Although serious environmental degradation of the vulnerable karst soil landscapes was expected to occur chiefly through the accumulation of various heavy metals, the most acute threat materialized through the soil acidification (Al-toxicity) affecting the entire Dinaric karst area. This picture surfaced from the analysis of all three investigated discriminant function models employing the abovementioned environmental criteria selected autonomously with respect to the evaluated soil geochemistry, namely, geologic setting, regional placement and land use. These models are presented by not only the characteristic discriminant-function diagrams but also a set of appropriate mathematically derived geochemical maps disclosing the allocations of potential threats to the karst soil landscapes posed by soil acidity.
Keyphrases
  • heavy metals
  • health risk
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • health risk assessment
  • plant growth
  • single cell
  • climate change
  • life cycle
  • hepatitis b virus
  • atomic force microscopy