Title of article :
Human exposure to mercury due to small scale gold
mining in northern Tanzania
Author/Authors :
Peter van StraatenU، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
In northern Tanzania large numbers of small scale miners use mercury in the gold extraction process causing
contamination of the environment and risks to human health. Human exposure to Hg was assessed in populations in
and around small scale gold mining camps by means of human hair and urine surveys. We also determined Hg
concentration in fish in aquatic bodies close to these camps. Urinary Hg testing in three communities showed that
36% of the gold miners working with amalgam exceeded the WHO guideline concentration of 50 mg Hgrg
creatinine. Data from a hair survey of fishermen and farmers confirm that at present, the fish-eating population close
to the southern tip of Lake Victoria is at low risk with regard to Hg exposure. Concentrations in fish were low and
)90% of the hair samples from the fish-eating population were below 2 mgrg T-Hg. Highest Hg concentrations in
fish caught along the southern shores of Lake Victoria and in rivers draining from gold processing sites were
detected in lungfish species Protopterus aethiopicus., and lowest Hg concentrations in tilapia Oreochromis niloticus
and Tilapia zilii..
Keywords :
urine , Lake Victoria , Gold mining , FISH , hair , Occupational risks , Tanzania , mercury
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment