The strontium isotope fingerprint of phosphate rocks mining.

dc.contributor.author

Vengosh, Avner

dc.contributor.author

Wang, Zhen

dc.contributor.author

Williams, Gordon

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Hill, Robert

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M Coyte, Rachel

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Dwyer, Gary S

dc.date.accessioned

2023-02-19T02:42:23Z

dc.date.available

2023-02-19T02:42:23Z

dc.date.issued

2022-12

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2023-02-19T02:42:21Z

dc.description.abstract

High concentrations of metal(loid)s in phosphate rocks and wastewater associated with phosphate mining and fertilizer production operations pose potential contamination risks to water resources. Here, we propose using Sr isotopes as a tracer to determine possible water quality impacts induced from phosphate mining and fertilizers production. We utilized a regional case study in the northeastern Negev in Israel, where salinization of groundwater and a spring have been attributed to historic leaking and contamination from an upstream phosphate mining wastewater. This study presents a comprehensive dataset of major and trace elements, combined with Sr isotope analyses of the Rotem phosphate rocks, local aquifer carbonate rocks, wastewater from phosphate operation in Mishor Rotem Industries, saline groundwater suspected to be impacted by Rotem mining activities, and two types of background groundwater from the local Judea Group aquifer. The results of this study indicate that trace elements that are enriched in phosphate wastewater were ubiquitously present in the regional and non-contaminated groundwater at the same levels as detected in the impacted waters, and thus cannot be explicitly linked to the phosphate wastewater. The 87Sr/86Sr ratios of phosphate rocks (0.707794 ± 5 × 10-5) from Mishor Rotem Industries were identical to that of associated wastewater (0.707789 ± 3 × 10-5), indicating that the Sr isotopic fingerprint of phosphate rocks is preserved in its wastewater. The 87Sr/86Sr (0.707949 ± 3 × 10-6) of the impacted saline groundwater were significantly different from those of the Rotem wastewater and the background saline groundwater, excluding phosphate mining effluents as the major source for contamination of the aquifer. Instead, the 87Sr/86Sr ratio of the impacted water was similar to the composition of brines from the Dead Sea, which suggests that the salinization was derived primarily from industrial Dead Sea effluents with distinctive Sr isotope and geochemical fingerprints.

dc.identifier

S0048-9697(22)05070-7

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0048-9697

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1879-1026

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26628

dc.language

eng

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Elsevier BV

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The Science of the total environment

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10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157971

dc.subject

Carbonates

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Phosphates

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Trace Elements

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Isotopes

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Strontium Isotopes

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Fertilizers

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Water Pollutants, Chemical

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Environmental Monitoring

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Groundwater

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Wastewater

dc.title

The strontium isotope fingerprint of phosphate rocks mining.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Vengosh, Avner|0000-0001-8928-0157

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Wang, Zhen|0000-0001-5093-0917

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Williams, Gordon|0000-0002-9076-9635

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Hill, Robert|0000-0002-5504-8621

pubs.begin-page

157971

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Duke

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Nicholas School of the Environment

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Student

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Nicholas

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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University Institutes and Centers

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Duke Global Health Institute

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Duke Kunshan University

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DKU Faculty

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Nicholas Institute-Energy Initiative

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Earth and Climate Sciences

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

850

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