2017
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1706334114
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Rome’s urban history inferred from Pb-contaminated waters trapped in its ancient harbor basins

Abstract: Heavy metals from urban runoff preserved in sedimentary deposits record long-term economic and industrial development via the expansion and contraction of a city's infrastructure. Lead concentrations and isotopic compositions measured in the sediments of the harbor of Ostia-Rome's first harbor-show that lead pipes used in the water supply networks of Rome and Ostia were the only source of radiogenic Pb, which, in geologically young central Italy, is the hallmark of urban pollution. High-resolution geochemical,… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…First, the residual fraction left over after leaching a sample in the laboratory corresponds to the Pb contained initially in the mineral crystal lattice during rock formation and hence is referred to as natural, crustal, or detrital since it characterizes the local geogenic Pb background (26). Secondly, the leachate fraction (or extractable phase) represents the labile or anthropogenic component of the sample Pb, which is adsorbed onto sediments once released from an independent anthropogenic source (11,26). This anthropogenic component (e.g., lead pipes, gasoline, coal, aerosols, etc.)…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…First, the residual fraction left over after leaching a sample in the laboratory corresponds to the Pb contained initially in the mineral crystal lattice during rock formation and hence is referred to as natural, crustal, or detrital since it characterizes the local geogenic Pb background (26). Secondly, the leachate fraction (or extractable phase) represents the labile or anthropogenic component of the sample Pb, which is adsorbed onto sediments once released from an independent anthropogenic source (11,26). This anthropogenic component (e.g., lead pipes, gasoline, coal, aerosols, etc.)…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This natural Pb isotopic composition is also easily readable using the geochemically informed parameters T mod [Pb model ages in million years (Ma)] and κ (the 232 Th/ 238 U ratio), which are derived from the time-integrated Pb isotopic compositions using the equations given by Albarède et al (27). The advantages of this representation over that based on raw Pb isotopic ratios have been demonstrated in a number of geological (28), archaeological (27), and geoarchaeological contexts (11 i) The 69 Pb-polluted sediments differ from the unpolluted samples in both their Pb content and Pb isotopic composition. Lead concentrations and EF Pb range between 10 and 210 ppm (mean = 59.1 ppm) and 2.13 and 20.9 (mean = 6.9), respectively ( Fig.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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