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Industrial Sites (industrial + site)
Selected AbstractsGeophysical Investigation at the Falling Creek Ironworks, an Early Industrial Site in VirginiaARCHAEOLOGICAL PROSPECTION, Issue 4 2001Geoffrey Jones Abstract A geophysical investigation was conducted at the site of the Falling Creek Ironworks (1619,1622), the first iron production facility in North America. Electrical resistance and magnetic field gradient surveys were conducted over the site of the seventeenth century ironworks. Additionally, ground-penetrating radar was used to investigate areas under an existing roadway. Linear and rectangular anomalies that appear in the resistance data may be caused by architectural features, possibly shops or domestic structures associated with the ironworks. Several low-amplitude magnetic anomalies that appear in the data appear to be cultural in origin, and may be caused by features associated with the ironworks. A number of high-amplitude magnetic anomalies appear in the magnetic field gradient data that are thought to be associated with iron production, including extensive slag deposits and the possible location of the blast furnace. Ground-penetrating radar data shows an anomalous reflection in the vicinity of the suspected blast furnace, which is partially beneath the modern roadway. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Deterministic and Probabilistic Estimation of Appropriate Distances: Motivation for Considering the Consequences for Industrial SitesCHEMICAL ENGINEERING & TECHNOLOGY (CET), Issue 2 2009M. Gawlowski Abstract Accidents and disruptions in chemical process installations can, in principle, lead to the rare events in which the release of flammable and/or toxic substances occurs, and which at particular distances from the installation can result in a hazard potential due to thermal radiation, blast wave effects or the concentration of toxic substances. The possibilities and limits of deterministic and probabilistic estimation methods for appropriate distances from hazardous installations, based on the example of an ammonia release and a large surface fire, are shown. In this, it is demonstrated that the deterministic and probabilistic approaches are in no way conflicting or unnecessary, but rather that they are complementary. The use of a deterministic estimation method leads to a maximum set radius of effects which only take account of the damage impact. Depending on the selection of the appropriate and suitable consequence models, critical distances are calculated which are in some cases much larger than the current standardised distances, as is shown by the example of large-scale fires. The use of a probabilistic estimation method leads to a range of distances for which the individual risk can be given in addition. In principle, iso-contours joining points of same risk or areas of same risk may be defined through the use of such estimations. [source] Development of a simulated earthworm gut for determining bioaccessible arsenic, copper, and zinc from soil,ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 7 2009Wai K. Ma Abstract Soil physicochemical characteristics and contamination levels alter the bioavailability of metals to terrestrialinvertebrates. Current laboratory-derived benchmark concentrations used to estimate risk do not take into account site-specific conditions, such as contaminant sequestration, and site-specific risk assessment requires a battery of time-consuming and costly toxicity tests. The development of an in vitro simulator for earthworm bioaccessibility would significantly shorten analytical time and enable site managers to focus on areas of greatest concern. The simulated earthworm gut (SEG) was developed to measure the bioaccessibility of metals in soil to earthworms by mimicking the gastrointestinal fluid composition of earthworms. Three formulations of the SEG (enzymes, microbial culture, enzymes and microbial culture) were developed and used to digest field soils from a former industrial site with varying physicochemical characteristics and contamination levels. Formulations containing enzymes released between two to 10 times more arsenic, copper, and zinc from contaminated soils compared with control and 0.01 M CaCl2 extractions. Metal concentrations in extracts from SEG formulation with microbial culture alone were not different from values for chemical extractions. The mechanism for greater bioaccessible metal concentrations from enzyme-treated soils is uncertain, but it is postulated that enzymatic digestion of soil organic matter might release sequestered metal. The relevance of these SEG results will need validation through further comparison and correlation with bioaccumulation tests, alternative chemical extraction tests, and a battery of chronic toxicity tests with invertebrates and plants. [source] Arsenic and thallium data in environmental samples: Fact or fiction?REMEDIATION, Issue 4 2010Susan D. Chapnick Matrix effects may increasingly lead to erroneous environmental decisions as regulatory limits or risk-based concentrations of concern for trace metals move lower toward the limits of analytical detection. A U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Technical Standards Alert estimated that environmental data reported using inductively coupled plasma spectrometry (ICP-AES) has a false-positive rate for thallium of 99.9 percent and for arsenic of 25 to 50 percent. Although this does not seem to be widely known in the environmental community, using three case studies, this article presents data in environmental samples that demonstrate severe matrix effects on the accuracy of arsenic and thallium results. Case Study 1 involves soil results with concentrations that approached or exceeded the applicable regulatory soil cleanup objectives of 13 mg/kg for arsenic and 2 mg/kg for thallium. Reanalysis using ICP coupled with a mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) confirmed all thallium results were false positives and all arsenic results were biased high, concluding no action was required for soil remediation. Case Study 2 involves groundwater results for thallium at a Superfund site, where thallium was detected in groundwater up to 21.6 , g/L using ICP-AES. Reanalysis by ICP-MS reported thallium as nondetect below the applicable regulatory level in all samples. ICP-MS is usually a more definitive and accurate method of analysis compared to ICP-AES; however, this is not always the case, as we demonstrate in Case Study 3, using data from groundwater samples at an industrial site. Through a weight-of-evidence approach, it is demonstrated that although method quality control results were acceptable, interferences in some groundwater samples caused biased high results for arsenic using ICP-MS, which were significantly lower when reanalyzed using hydride generation atomic fluorescence spectrometry. Causes of these interference effects and conclusions from the three case studies to obtain accurate metal data for site assessment, risk characterization, and remedy selection are discussed. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] A practical approach to steam-enhanced dual-phase extraction: A case studyREMEDIATION, Issue 3 2003David P. Bouchard This article presents the results of a pilot test that was conducted to determine the effectiveness of using steam-enhanced dual-phase extraction (DPE) at a former industrial site in New York. The pilot test proved that steam-enhanced DPE was very effective at removing significant contaminant mass from the subsurface in a relatively short time period. Concentrations of volatile organic compounds and semivolatile organic compounds in the vapor stream and groundwater were successfully reduced, in some cases by orders of magnitude. Based on the results of the steam-enhanced DPE pilot test, the final remedy for the site includes implementing this technology at selected areas as an alternative to DPE alone or other remedial alternatives, such as excavation or groundwater pump and treat. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] Die Häufigkeit von Oenothera -Arten im westlichen MitteleuropaFEDDES REPERTORIUM, Issue 5-6 2003R. Wittig Professor Dr. Auf ausgewählten Industrie- und Verkehrstandorten in drei Ballungsgebieten des westlichen Mitteleuropas (Rhein-Ruhr-Gebiet: Nordrhein-Westfalen/ Deutschland; Frankfurt: Hessen/Deutschland; Oberrheingebiet: Baden-Württemberg/Deutschland und Elsass/ Frankreich) wurde in den Jahren 1999 bis 2002 an ausgewählten, Oenothera -reichen Standorten (Industriegelände, Bahngelände, Hafenanlagen) eine quantitative Bestandsaufnahme der Oenothera -Arten vorgenommen. Hierbei belegten O. biennis und O. fallax nahezu gleichrangig den ersten Platz in der Häufigkeitsliste. Mit teilweise recht deut-lichem Abstand folgen O. pycnocarpa und O. glazioviana auf den Plätzen 3 und 4. Bemerkenswer-terweise ergab eine gleichzeitig in Frankfurt durchgeführte Rasterkartierung der Oenothera -Arten die gleiche Reihenfolge dieser vier Spezies im Hinblick auf die Zahl der von ihnen besiedelten Rasterfelder. Wie der Vergleich mit älteren Arbeiten zeigt, in denen O. biennis stets als die eindeutig häufigste Art genannt wird, hat sich O. fallax offensichtlich erst in jüngster Zeit stark ausgebreitet. Frequency of species of Oenothera in Western Central Europe Between 1999 and 2002 a quantitative inventory of Oenothera species was carried out in three urban agglomeration areas in Western Central Europe [Rhine-Ruhr-Area: North Rhine-Westfalia/Germany; Frankfurt (Main) Hessen/Germany; Upper Rhine Area-Baden-Wurttemberg/Germany and Elsace/ France] in areas with a rich abundance of Oenothera (manufacturing plants, stations, docks) at selected industrial sites and locations with high volumes of traffic. Results revealed that Oenotherabiennis and O. fallax occur most frequently followed after a wide margin by Oenothera pycnocarpa and O. glazioviana in third and fourth position. It is noteworthy that a grid mapping of Oenothera species undertaken simultanously in Frankfurt revealed the same order of frequency for the four species with respect to the number of grid cells they occupy. A comparison with previous studies, which all name Oenothera biennis as the most frequently occurring species, demonstrates clearly that the high frequency of Oenothera fallax is the result of a recent development. [source] Spaces of Utopia and Dystopia: Landscaping the Contemporary CityGEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES B: HUMAN GEOGRAPHY, Issue 3-4 2002Gordon MacLeod Some of the most recent literature within urban studies gives the distinct impression that the contemporary city now constitutes an intensely uneven patchwork of utopian and dystopian spaces that are, to all intents and purposes, physically proximate but institutionally estranged. For instance, so,called edge cities (Garreau, 1991) have been heralded as a new Eden for the information age. Meanwhile tenderly manicured urban villages, gated estates and fashionably gentrified inner,city enclaves are all being furiously marketed as idyllic landscapes to ensure a variety of lifestyle fantasies. Such lifestyles are offered additional expression beyond the home, as renaissance sites in many downtowns afford city stakeholders the pleasurable freedoms one might ordinarily associate with urban civic life. None,the,less, strict assurances are given about how these privatized domiciliary and commercialized ,public' spaces are suitably excluded from the real and imagined threats of another fiercely hostile, dystopian environment ,out there'. This is captured in a number of (largely US) perspectives which warn of a ,fortified' or ,revanchist' urban landscape, characterized by mounting social and political unrest and pockmarked with marginal interstices: derelict industrial sites, concentrated hyperghettos, and peripheral shanty towns where the poor and the homeless are increasingly shunted. Our paper offers a review of some key debates in urban geography, planning and urban politics in order to examine this patchwork,quilt urbanism, In doing so, it seeks to uncover some of the key processes through which contemporary urban landscapes of utopia and dystopia come to exist in the way they do. [source] Paleopathology and health of native and introduced animals on Southern Peruvian and Bolivian Spanish Colonial sitesINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 5 2010S. D. Defrance Abstract Spanish colonial sites in southern Peru and Bolivia contain remains of native camelids and introduced bovids with examples of degenerative paleopathologies that are interpreted as reflecting changes in herd management, animal use and animal health following the Spanish conquest. The archaeological contexts include three Spanish colonial wineries from Moquegua in southern Peru and the nearby colonial village of Torata Alta where indigenous people were forced to resettle under Spanish control. Also from Peru is faunal material from the 14th to 16th century rural agropastoral village of Pillistay located near Camana. Animal remains with bone abnormalities are also present in residential, commercial and industrial sites associated with Spanish silver mining near Potosí, Bolivia at Tarapaya and Cruz Pampa. Eighteen pathological specimens are described including examples of degenerative changes to phalanges, vertebrae, tarsals, limb elements and ribs. Paleopathologies present include exostoses, osteophytes, porosity, grooving and eburnation. Examples of phalangeal exostoses on bovid phalanges indicate the use of these introduced animals as draught cattle. Exostoses on camelid first phalanges suggests their use as cargo animals as do thoracic vertebrae with severe cases of degenerative pathology. Introduced caprines contain few pathologies indicating their primary use as food animals. The bone abnormalities from colonial sites are more severe than those reported for prehispanic faunal assemblages. These data provide insights into the health and work behaviour of indigenous Andean camelids and introduced Eurasian animals following the Spanish conquest. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The New Mega-Projects: Genesis and ImpactsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 4 2008FERNANDO DIAZ ORUETA Abstract Critiques of urban renewal and large-scale developments were prominent in the period 1960,80. In particular, they emphasized the negative environmental and social consequences of these schemes and especially attacked them for displacing low-income and ethnically different populations. In the 1980s and 1990s, we saw a decline in such projects in many places, responding to popular protest and intellectual dissent, along with a new emphasis on preservation. More recently, however, we see the revival of mega-projects, often connected with tourism and sports development and incorporating the designs of world-famous architects. Frequently these are on landfill or abandoned industrial sites. The symposium for which this is an introduction shows the growing convergence of North American and European projects. This convergence is visible in their physical form, their financing, and in the role played by the state in a world marked by neoliberalism. At the same time, the new projects do display a greater environmental sensitivity and commitment to urbanity than the modernist schemes of an earlier epoch. Résumé Dans la période 1960,1980, les critiques sur les aménagements à grande échelle et les grandes rénovations urbaines étaient fréquentes. Elles soulignaient notamment les conséquences environnementales et sociales néfastes de ces programmes, en leur reprochant en particulier de déplacer les populations à faible revenu ou d'appartenance ethnique différente. Dans les années 1980 et 1990, ces projets se sont faits plus rares dans bien des endroits, répondant à la contestation populaire et au désaccord des intellectuels, parallèlement à une préoccupation nouvelle pour la préservation. Dernièrement, pourtant, les mégaprojets ont réapparu, souvent associés à un aménagement touristique ou sportif et intégrant des créations d'architectes de renommée mondiale. Ils se situent fréquemment sur le site d'anciennes décharges ou usines abandonnées. Le symposium dont ce texte sert d'introduction montre la convergence croissante des projets nord-américains et européens, convergence que l'on constate dans leur forme physique, leur financement et dans le rôle que joue l'État dans un monde empreint de néolibéralisme. En même temps, les nouveaux projets affichent une sensibilitéà l'environnement et un engagement vis-à-vis de l'urbanité plus marqués que les programmes modernistes antérieurs. [source] Integration of magnetism and heavy metal chemistry of soils to quantify the environmental pollution in Kathmandu, NepalISLAND ARC, Issue 4 2005Pitambar Gautam Abstract Soil profiles of the Kathmandu urban area exhibit significant variations in magnetic susceptibility (,) and saturation isothermal remanence (SIRM), which can be used to discriminate environmental pollution. Magnetic susceptibility can be used to delineate soil intervals by depth into normal (< 10,7 m3/kg), moderately enhanced (10,7,< 10,6 m3/kg) and highly enhanced (, 10,6 m3/kg). Soils far from roads and industrial sites commonly fall into the ,normal' category. Close to a road corridor, soils at depths of several centimeters have the highest ,, which remains high within the upper 20 cm interval, and decreases with depth through ,moderately magnetic' to ,normal' at approximately 30,40 cm. Soils in the upper parts of profiles in urban recreational parks have moderate ,. Soil SIRM has three components of distinct median acquisition fields (B1/2): soft (30,50 mT, magnetite-like phase), intermediate (120,180 mT, probably maghemite or soft coercivity hematite) and hard (550,600 mT, hematite). Close to the daylight surface, SIRM is dominated by a soft component, implying that urban pollution results in enrichment by a magnetite-like phase. Atomic absorption spectrometry of soils from several profiles for heavy metals reveals remarkable variability (ratio of maximum to minimum contents) of Cu (16.3), Zn (14.8) and Pb (9.3). At Rani Pokhari, several metals are well correlated with ,, as shown by a linear relationship between the logarithmic values. At Ratna Park, however, both , and SIRM show significant positive correlation with Zn, Pb and Cu, but poor and even negative correlation with Fe (Mn), Cr, Ni and Co. Such differences result from a variety of geogenic, pedogenic, biogenic and man-made factors, which vary in time and space. Nevertheless, for soil profiles affected by pollution (basically traffic-related), , exhibits a significant linear relationship with a pollution index based on the contents of some urban elements (Cu, Pb, Zn), and therefore it serves as an effective parameter for quantifying the urban pollution. [source] Continuous Soluble Ziegler-Natta Ethylene Polymerizations in Reactor Trains, 3 , Influence of Operating Conditions upon Process PerformanceMACROMOLECULAR REACTION ENGINEERING, Issue 2 2008Marcelo Embiruçu Abstract The behavior of continuous solution ethylene/but-1-ene polymerizations through Ziegler-Natta catalysts is analyzed, based on a previously developed mathematical model. In order to do that, dynamic simulations are carried out and process responses are analyzed as functions of process operating policies and flowsheet configuration, at conditions that resemble the actual operation of industrial sites. It is shown that system responses are highly nonlinear and very sensitive to disturbances of the operating conditions and that catalyst decay is of fundamental importance for proper understanding of process behavior. Results indicate that mixing conditions inside the reactor vessels exert a significant impact upon the final polymer quality and can be manipulated for in-line control of final resin properties. Finally, it is shown that the development of feed policies, based on the use of lateral feed streams, allows the simultaneous control of melt flow index, stress exponent and polymer density of the final polymer resin. [source] |