2023
DOI: 10.1002/prep.202300181
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Environmental and human toxicology studies on explosive chemicals leaking from submerged munitions

Edmund Maser,
Tobias Hartwig Bünning,
Jennifer Susanne Strehse

Abstract: This review provides an overview of 15 years of munitions research by the Institute of Toxicology and Pharmacology for Natural Scientists, University Medical School Schleswig‐Holstein, Kiel, Germany. As early as 2009, it was possible to detect the TNT metabolite 4‐ADNT in a quantity of 250 ng/g (wet weight) in blue mussels collected directly on munition items in the Kolberger Heide dumping area (Bight of Kiel, Baltic Sea, Germany). Based on these results, biomonitoring with blue mussels was established, in whi… Show more

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“…After degradation of the ammunition shells, for example due to corrosion of metal parts, both compounds from the shells and the energetic contents of the ammunition can leak into the environment. These compounds or their metabolites are toxic to the environment [1]. Only little scientific research has been performed on the degradation processes of underwater ammunition, making it difficult to predict the rate of release of these compounds.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After degradation of the ammunition shells, for example due to corrosion of metal parts, both compounds from the shells and the energetic contents of the ammunition can leak into the environment. These compounds or their metabolites are toxic to the environment [1]. Only little scientific research has been performed on the degradation processes of underwater ammunition, making it difficult to predict the rate of release of these compounds.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%