The relationship between As bioaccessibility using the physiologically based extraction test (PBET) and As extracted by hydroxylamine hydrochloride (HH), targeting the dissolution of amorphous Fe oxyhydroxides, is established in soils from the British Geological Survey Geochemical Baseline Survey of SW England, UK, to represent low As background and high As mineralised/mined soils. The HH-extracted As was of the same order of magnitude as the As extracted in the bioaccessibility test and proved to be a better estimate of bioaccessible As than total As (bioaccessible As − total As: r = 0.955; bioaccessible As – HH-extracted As: r = 0.974; p-values = 0.000). These results provide a means of estimating soil As bioaccessibility on the basis of ...
The chemical composition of soil from the Glasgow (UK) urban area was used to identify the controls ...
Historical use of high arsenic (As) concentrations in cattle/sheep dipping vat sites to treat ticks ...
International audienceIron (III) oxides are ubiquitous components of soils, sediments, aquifers and ...
AbstractThe relationship between As bioaccessibility using the physiologically based extraction test...
This study characterises the total As concentrations and As bioaccessibility in 109 soils from Devon...
Arsenic bioaccessibility varies with in vitro methods and soils. Four assays including unified BARGE...
The aim of this research is to use the whole soil geochemistry and selected bioaccessibility measure...
Bio-accessibility and bioavailability of arsenic (As) in historically As-contaminated soils (cattle ...
Arsenic bioaccessibility tests are now being commonly used in risk assessment. However, concerns rem...
Jurassic ironstones outcropping over parts of eastern England give rise to soils with arsenic concen...
The human ingestion bioaccessibility of As was measured on 50 representative samples of soils select...
Arsenic (As) bioaccessibility in contaminated soils (n = 50) was assessed using the simplified bioac...
Floodplain soils are frequently contaminated with metal(loid)s due to present or historic mining, ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Twenty samples from soils developed over the Northampton Sand ironstone formation were collected fro...
The chemical composition of soil from the Glasgow (UK) urban area was used to identify the controls ...
Historical use of high arsenic (As) concentrations in cattle/sheep dipping vat sites to treat ticks ...
International audienceIron (III) oxides are ubiquitous components of soils, sediments, aquifers and ...
AbstractThe relationship between As bioaccessibility using the physiologically based extraction test...
This study characterises the total As concentrations and As bioaccessibility in 109 soils from Devon...
Arsenic bioaccessibility varies with in vitro methods and soils. Four assays including unified BARGE...
The aim of this research is to use the whole soil geochemistry and selected bioaccessibility measure...
Bio-accessibility and bioavailability of arsenic (As) in historically As-contaminated soils (cattle ...
Arsenic bioaccessibility tests are now being commonly used in risk assessment. However, concerns rem...
Jurassic ironstones outcropping over parts of eastern England give rise to soils with arsenic concen...
The human ingestion bioaccessibility of As was measured on 50 representative samples of soils select...
Arsenic (As) bioaccessibility in contaminated soils (n = 50) was assessed using the simplified bioac...
Floodplain soils are frequently contaminated with metal(loid)s due to present or historic mining, ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Twenty samples from soils developed over the Northampton Sand ironstone formation were collected fro...
The chemical composition of soil from the Glasgow (UK) urban area was used to identify the controls ...
Historical use of high arsenic (As) concentrations in cattle/sheep dipping vat sites to treat ticks ...
International audienceIron (III) oxides are ubiquitous components of soils, sediments, aquifers and ...