Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Presentation from Maul Foster and Alongi

Several people from the Bellingham, Portland, and Vancouver (WA) offices of Maul Foster and Alongi had a special seminar for SMoCS students today.  The seminar used examples of cleanup sites the company has worked on near Portland.  They showed examples of dredging and a sediment cap being placed.   They showed examples of models used for decisions as to how deep a sand layer should be for a cap, what expected contaminant concentrations are on a site, and a TCE and degradates groundwater plume.  They also showed an a strategy for cleaning up groundwater contamination with a permeable reactive barriers.

This presentation was a great supporting element to the Fate and Transport and SMoCS classes.  Thanks to all who attended and presented!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Site Visit to the ESY Site

About 32 students went to the Port of Everett today to visit our site (the Everett Shipyard) for the SMoCS courses. We met representatives of the Port, who is responsible for the cleanup activities of the site. They presented background information about the Port, the site, and MTCA and then took us on a tour of the site. We saw the marine railway where boats were removed from the water and the areas where maintenance on the boats was conducted. The contaminated material from sand blasting was still present on site, which was interesting for the students to see. Our tour guides also showed up the new boat storage area, where all surface run-off is collected in underground tanks and sent to the municipal water treatment facility, essentially eliminating non-point source run-off from the site.

Monday, January 9, 2012

New SMoCS courses at Huxley

The new Science and Management of Contaminated Sites (SMoCS) courses started today. Almost 40 students from Environmental Sciences, Environmental Studies and Journalism are enrolled. The students are in for a great quarter as we learn about the Model Toxics Control Act (MTCA), which is the Washington State regulations through which some contaminated sites are cleaned up. We are focusing on the Everett Shipyard (ESY) site this quarter.` I'll have occasional posts about the course here.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Fine Particulate Matter and Health Effects

On November 3 and 4, Chad Weldy gave a few presentations on campus. Chad is a PhD student in the Dept. of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences at the School of Public Health, University of Washington. He graduated with his BS from Huxley in 2007 with an emphasis in Environmental Toxicology; I was glad to welcome him back.

Chad had a busy scheduled. He lectured in my Toxicology 1 class and was the Huxley Seminar Speaker for the week. He was also interviewed on, The Joe Show, a local radio show on KGMI . The second part of the show has Chad's interview.

All of the talks were related to his PhD work on the human health effects of a specific type of air pollution, fine particulate matter (PM2.5). He focused on the impacts of diesel exhaust (a source of PM2.5) on cardiovascular disease and cardiovascular related mortality. With the proposed coal terminal in north Whatcom County and a potential increase in diesel trains as a result, the talk was very quite relevant to current issues here. What was interesting to me was that studies support increased myocardial infarctions (heart attacks) when PM2.5 was high, which can occur when there are weather inversions and sources of PM2.5 (for example, from wood stoves or diesel exhaust). Even more interesting is that a recent epidemiological study found an increased incidence of heart attacks during air pollution episodes, but the authors found a decrease in heart attacks following the episode. They concluded that the air pollution may have shifted the timing of the heart attacks forward in people who would have had heart attacks despite the air pollution episode. As Chad stated, though, this is of debate in the scientific community right now. What doesn't appear to be of debate is that older people are more at risk of heart attacks during acute exposures to PM2.5 from air pollution.

The Huxley Seminar was recorded and is available on Youtube here. Great work Chad!

Additional Resources:



Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2011/11/03/2256496/wwu-to-host-air-pollution-lecture.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

An opportunity to comment on Atrazine....

1) EPA Seeks Comment on Save the Frogs! Atrazine Petition (from Mary-Jean Lormand, EPA Pesticide Program Updates)

EPA is seeking public comment on a May 2011 petition from the amphibian conservation group, Save the Frogs, requesting that the Agency ban the use and production of atrazine. EPA asks that comments on the Save the Frogs petition be submitted within 60 days, by November 14, 2011, to docket EPA-HQ-OPP-2011-0586 at Regulations.gov. EPA will review all comments submitted before responding to the petition.

For further information about EPA's regulation of atrazine, visit its Atrazine Updates Web page, http://www.epa.gov/oppsrrd1/reregistration/atrazine/atrazine_update.htm .

Interesting Articles:

  • Rohr JR, McCoy KA 2010. A Qualitative Meta-Analysis Reveals Consistent Effects of Atrazine on Freshwater Fish and Amphibians. Environ Health Perspect 118:20-32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.0901164

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Trojan Horses

I attended a lecture recently by Fabienne Schwab on the effects of diuron and carbon nanotubes (CNT) to algae. Diuron partitions to a great extent to the CNTs. Depending on your perspective, this can be beneficial or detrimental. As a remedial technology, it has been suggested that the CNTs (and other carbon nanoparticles) can help to remove contaminants through sorption or by chemically modifying the contaminants. From a toxicological perspective, however, the sorption mechanism may cause further problems by concentrating the toxic contaminants. The term Schwab used to describe the most concerning problem with this is that these CNTs can act like a Trojan Horse and deliver highly concentrated environmental toxicants (like diuron) to an organism - this is not good. The term Trojan Horse is also being used by the medical community where the nanoparticles are used to deliver medicine to targeted areas - this is good. In my opinion, all of these perspectives (and more, for example, the question of how fate and transport is affected needs to be addressed) are needed to help manage uses of nanotechnology, particularly when there is the potential for releases into the environment.

Interesting Articles:

  • Rajan, C.S. 2011. Nanotechnology in Groundwater Remediation. International Journal of Environmental Science and Development, 2(3):
  • Li, X., Zhao, H., Quan, X., Chen, S., Zhang, Y., and H. Yu. 2011. Adsorption of Ionizable organic contaminants on multi-walled carbon nanotubes with different oxygen contents. Journal of Hazardous Materials, 186(1): 407-415.

Monday, May 9, 2011

More ISE work

I've been to Geneva a few more times and am working at my Eawag lab now. We were able to get the limit of detection for Ag down one order of magnitude, two orders of magnitude would make me very happy. We