Distribution of chromium, nickel, copper and zinc in the Al Zintan area, northwestern Libya
Authors
Alzarog, Taher MohamedVakanjac, Boris
Jelić, Ivana
Ristić Vakanjac, Vesna
Naunović, Zorana

Đorđević Milošević, Suzana
Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Global population is growing rapidly. As a result, increasingly large areas are being settled and farmed. This devastates soils and causes pollution by heavy metals and other components. Heavy metals in the environment originate from both natural and anthropogenic sources. Natural sources generally include rock weathering and the propagation of heavy metals, such as Cr and Ni, from ultrabasic rocks. These are natural processes that generally do not threaten human health. Anthropogenic sources include industry and inappropriate disposal of waste in the environment. In such cases concentrations of heavy metals can be harmful to people and other living beings. Al Zintan is a city located in northwestern Libya, on a plateau mainly built up of Cretaceous sediments. Since the 1980’s, nomadic population has rapidly been settling this area. As a result, a former part of the desert was transformed and is used for farming. Soil sampling at Al Zintan was conducted in 2017, across a 2×2 km grid. A... total of 143 samples were collected from depths of about 30 cm. The samples weighed 2 to 2.5 kg and generally comprised sand with a clay component. A Niton Xl3t goldd+ instrument was used for chemical analyses, based on which GIS heavy-metal distribution maps were generated. The distribution of Cr, Ni, Cu and Zn is discussed on the paper.
Keywords:
heavy metals / distribution / sampling / Al Zintan / LibyaSource:
Geološki anali Balkanskoga poluostrva, 2018, 79, 2Collections
Institution/Community
GraFarTY - JOUR AU - Alzarog, Taher Mohamed AU - Vakanjac, Boris AU - Jelić, Ivana AU - Ristić Vakanjac, Vesna AU - Naunović, Zorana AU - Đorđević Milošević, Suzana PY - 2018 UR - https://grafar.grf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2943 AB - Global population is growing rapidly. As a result, increasingly large areas are being settled and farmed. This devastates soils and causes pollution by heavy metals and other components. Heavy metals in the environment originate from both natural and anthropogenic sources. Natural sources generally include rock weathering and the propagation of heavy metals, such as Cr and Ni, from ultrabasic rocks. These are natural processes that generally do not threaten human health. Anthropogenic sources include industry and inappropriate disposal of waste in the environment. In such cases concentrations of heavy metals can be harmful to people and other living beings. Al Zintan is a city located in northwestern Libya, on a plateau mainly built up of Cretaceous sediments. Since the 1980’s, nomadic population has rapidly been settling this area. As a result, a former part of the desert was transformed and is used for farming. Soil sampling at Al Zintan was conducted in 2017, across a 2×2 km grid. A total of 143 samples were collected from depths of about 30 cm. The samples weighed 2 to 2.5 kg and generally comprised sand with a clay component. A Niton Xl3t goldd+ instrument was used for chemical analyses, based on which GIS heavy-metal distribution maps were generated. The distribution of Cr, Ni, Cu and Zn is discussed on the paper. T2 - Geološki anali Balkanskoga poluostrva T1 - Distribution of chromium, nickel, copper and zinc in the Al Zintan area, northwestern Libya IS - 2 VL - 79 DO - 10.2298/GABP1802029A ER -
@article{ author = "Alzarog, Taher Mohamed and Vakanjac, Boris and Jelić, Ivana and Ristić Vakanjac, Vesna and Naunović, Zorana and Đorđević Milošević, Suzana", year = "2018", abstract = "Global population is growing rapidly. As a result, increasingly large areas are being settled and farmed. This devastates soils and causes pollution by heavy metals and other components. Heavy metals in the environment originate from both natural and anthropogenic sources. Natural sources generally include rock weathering and the propagation of heavy metals, such as Cr and Ni, from ultrabasic rocks. These are natural processes that generally do not threaten human health. Anthropogenic sources include industry and inappropriate disposal of waste in the environment. In such cases concentrations of heavy metals can be harmful to people and other living beings. Al Zintan is a city located in northwestern Libya, on a plateau mainly built up of Cretaceous sediments. Since the 1980’s, nomadic population has rapidly been settling this area. As a result, a former part of the desert was transformed and is used for farming. Soil sampling at Al Zintan was conducted in 2017, across a 2×2 km grid. A total of 143 samples were collected from depths of about 30 cm. The samples weighed 2 to 2.5 kg and generally comprised sand with a clay component. A Niton Xl3t goldd+ instrument was used for chemical analyses, based on which GIS heavy-metal distribution maps were generated. The distribution of Cr, Ni, Cu and Zn is discussed on the paper.", journal = "Geološki anali Balkanskoga poluostrva", title = "Distribution of chromium, nickel, copper and zinc in the Al Zintan area, northwestern Libya", number = "2", volume = "79", doi = "10.2298/GABP1802029A" }
Alzarog, T. M., Vakanjac, B., Jelić, I., Ristić Vakanjac, V., Naunović, Z.,& Đorđević Milošević, S.. (2018). Distribution of chromium, nickel, copper and zinc in the Al Zintan area, northwestern Libya. in Geološki anali Balkanskoga poluostrva, 79(2). https://doi.org/10.2298/GABP1802029A
Alzarog TM, Vakanjac B, Jelić I, Ristić Vakanjac V, Naunović Z, Đorđević Milošević S. Distribution of chromium, nickel, copper and zinc in the Al Zintan area, northwestern Libya. in Geološki anali Balkanskoga poluostrva. 2018;79(2). doi:10.2298/GABP1802029A .
Alzarog, Taher Mohamed, Vakanjac, Boris, Jelić, Ivana, Ristić Vakanjac, Vesna, Naunović, Zorana, Đorđević Milošević, Suzana, "Distribution of chromium, nickel, copper and zinc in the Al Zintan area, northwestern Libya" in Geološki anali Balkanskoga poluostrva, 79, no. 2 (2018), https://doi.org/10.2298/GABP1802029A . .