As floods increase in frequency
and intensity, chemicals buried in river sediments become “ticking time bombs”
waiting to activate.
Hurricane Harvey flooded or
damaged at least 13 Superfund sites in 2017, sending cancer-causing compounds
into Texas waterways.
A new perspective paper in
Journal of Hazardous Materials calls attention to an understudied area: the
remobilization of pollutants buried in riverbeds. Chemicals have a knack for
binding to sediments, meaning chemical spills in rivers frequently seep into
sediments instead of flowing downstream. Future layers of silt bury the
pollutants and hide the problem.
But persistent chemicals in
riverbeds are “ticking time bombs,” warned Sarah Crawford, an environmental
toxicologist at Goethe University Frankfurt and lead author of the paper. The
buried chemicals can easily be remobilized. “It just takes one flood event,”
she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment