Content-Length: 21817 | pFad | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31910512
arOil Spill Chemicals (OSCs) represent a risk to the environment and human health, especially in nearshore environments used for recreational purposes. Importantly, the starting point for human health risk assessment is to define the concentration of OSCs at nearshore locations. The objective of this study was to evaluate nearshore sampling data of OSC concentrations in different environmental matrices within time-space specific categories. The categories correspond to OSC concentration values for samples collected prior to nearshore oiling, post nearshore oiling and at no time impacted by oil as predicted by historic oil spill trajectories generated by an Oil Spill Trajectory Model. In general, concentration values for the post category were higher than prior which were higher than unimpacted. Results show differences in PAH concentration patterns within each matrix and for each category. Concentration frequency distributions for most chemicals in each category were log-normally distributed.
Keywords: Chemical distributions; Human health; Marine oil spills; PAHs.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Fetched URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31910512
Alternative Proxies: