Evaluation of potentially toxic elements and ecological risks associated with environmental liabilities in Tacna, Peru
César Julio Cáceda Quiroz, Gisela July Maraza Choque, Gabriela de Lourdes Fora Quispe, Diana Galeska Farfan Pajuelo, Edwin Denis Obando Velarde, Fulvia Chiampo, Milena Carpio Mamani

TL;DR
This study assesses contamination and ecological risks from abandoned mining sites in Tacna, Peru, finding dangerous levels of toxic elements that require urgent remediation.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive evaluation of multiple environmental indices to assess contamination and ecological risks from mining liabilities in Tacna.
Findings
Elevated concentrations of arsenic, cadmium, lead, and free cyanide were found, exceeding regulatory standards.
Ecological risk indices consistently indicated severe contamination across all evaluated areas.
PCA and correlation analysis revealed multiple pollution sources and common dispersion pathways for toxic elements.
Abstract
Mining environmental liabilities (MELs) are abandoned deposits resulting from extractive activities that pose a high risk of contamination and remain an unresolved challenge for authorities worldwide. This study evaluated the contamination levels of potentially toxic elements (PTEs) and their associated ecological risks in MELs, using multiple environmental indices. Analyses were performed following the EPA 6020A method with acid digestion and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), while free cyanide and hexavalent chromium were determined using the EPA 9013A and EPA 7199 methods, respectively. The results revealed elevated concentrations of arsenic (1,102 mg/kg), cadmium (271 mg/kg), lead (15,961 mg/kg), and free cyanide (64 mg/kg), which exceeded regulatory standards by a considerable margin. Statistically significant differences were observed across the sites (p <…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeavy metals in environment · Mining and Resource Management · Mine drainage and remediation techniques
