Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan

Heavy metal contamination in the urban river has become the most severe problem in the urban environment, especially the zinc (Zn) compound is harmful to the environment at current levels of exposure. This study aims to assess the impact of urbanization and industrialization on Zn pollution in surf...

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Main Authors: Wardhani, Widyastuti Kusuma, Ariesyady, Herto Dwi, Andarani, Pertiwi, Nguyen, Minh Ngoc, Yokota, Kuriko, Inoue, Takanobu
Format: Article PeerReviewed
Language:English
Published: International Water Association 2022
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Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281812/1/Wardhani_SV.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281812/
https://iwaponline.com/ws/article-pdf/22/4/3941/1041182/ws022043941.pdf
https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2022.025
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spelling id-ugm-repo.2818122023-11-13T08:56:48Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281812/ Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan Wardhani, Widyastuti Kusuma Ariesyady, Herto Dwi Andarani, Pertiwi Nguyen, Minh Ngoc Yokota, Kuriko Inoue, Takanobu Civil Engineering Heavy metal contamination in the urban river has become the most severe problem in the urban environment, especially the zinc (Zn) compound is harmful to the environment at current levels of exposure. This study aims to assess the impact of urbanization and industrialization on Zn pollution in surface sediment at the Umeda River. Triplicate surface sediment samples were collected at nine sample points. An atomic absorption spectrophotometer was used for analyzing the Zn and Fe concentrations. The surface sediments in the Umeda River contained 48–159 mg/kg of Zn. The results indicated that Zn concentrations were abundant in the ascending order of 600–1,000 μm, 300–600 μm, and smaller than 300 μm. The higher the grain size, the higher the particulate organic carbon which might contribute to the higher Zn and Fe concentrations. In addition, the sediment quality guidelines indicated that the Zn levels in the study area did not constitute a major threat to biota. Normalization with Fe showed that the Zn pollution in surface sediment had been influenced by anthropogenic activities such as industrialization and urbanization. International Water Association 2022 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281812/1/Wardhani_SV.pdf Wardhani, Widyastuti Kusuma and Ariesyady, Herto Dwi and Andarani, Pertiwi and Nguyen, Minh Ngoc and Yokota, Kuriko and Inoue, Takanobu (2022) Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan. Water Supply, 22 (4). pp. 3941-3950. ISSN 1607-0798 https://iwaponline.com/ws/article-pdf/22/4/3941/1041182/ws022043941.pdf https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2022.025
institution Universitas Gadjah Mada
building UGM Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider UGM Library
collection Repository Civitas UGM
language English
topic Civil Engineering
spellingShingle Civil Engineering
Wardhani, Widyastuti Kusuma
Ariesyady, Herto Dwi
Andarani, Pertiwi
Nguyen, Minh Ngoc
Yokota, Kuriko
Inoue, Takanobu
Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan
description Heavy metal contamination in the urban river has become the most severe problem in the urban environment, especially the zinc (Zn) compound is harmful to the environment at current levels of exposure. This study aims to assess the impact of urbanization and industrialization on Zn pollution in surface sediment at the Umeda River. Triplicate surface sediment samples were collected at nine sample points. An atomic absorption spectrophotometer was used for analyzing the Zn and Fe concentrations. The surface sediments in the Umeda River contained 48–159 mg/kg of Zn. The results indicated that Zn concentrations were abundant in the ascending order of 600–1,000 μm, 300–600 μm, and smaller than 300 μm. The higher the grain size, the higher the particulate organic carbon which might contribute to the higher Zn and Fe concentrations. In addition, the sediment quality guidelines indicated that the Zn levels in the study area did not constitute a major threat to biota. Normalization with Fe showed that the Zn pollution in surface sediment had been influenced by anthropogenic activities such as industrialization and urbanization.
format Article
PeerReviewed
author Wardhani, Widyastuti Kusuma
Ariesyady, Herto Dwi
Andarani, Pertiwi
Nguyen, Minh Ngoc
Yokota, Kuriko
Inoue, Takanobu
author_facet Wardhani, Widyastuti Kusuma
Ariesyady, Herto Dwi
Andarani, Pertiwi
Nguyen, Minh Ngoc
Yokota, Kuriko
Inoue, Takanobu
author_sort Wardhani, Widyastuti Kusuma
title Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan
title_short Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan
title_full Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan
title_fullStr Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of Umeda River, Japan
title_sort assessment of zinc concentrations in surface sediment from urban and industrial sites of umeda river, japan
publisher International Water Association
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281812/1/Wardhani_SV.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281812/
https://iwaponline.com/ws/article-pdf/22/4/3941/1041182/ws022043941.pdf
https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2022.025
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