1. Geological and mineralogical characterization of fibrous tremolite from Iacolinei quarry (Basilicata, Italy).
- Author
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Pacella A, Ballirano P, Di Carlo MC, Altieri A, Paccapelo M, Skogby H, Campopiano A, Bruno MR, Croce A, Piersante C, Apollaro C, Malvasi G, Bruni BM, and Bloise A
- Subjects
- Italy, X-Ray Diffraction, Geologic Sediments chemistry, Environmental Monitoring, Asbestos, Amphibole analysis
- Abstract
Naturally Occurring Asbestos (NOA) has drawn the attention worldwide when investigation revealed an increased incidence of malignant mesothelioma in population living near NOA sites. In Basilicata region (South Italy), population living in the villages of Castelluccio Superiore and Inferiore, Lauria, Latronico, Episcopia, San Severino Lucano, and Francavilla in Sinni may be considered at high risk of asbestos exposure because these villages are either surrounded by or built on NOA-rich ophiolitic outcrops. In this work we investigated an asbestos tremolite sample coming from the ophiolitic rocks outcropping in the quarry of Iacolinei, widely used in the past to extract aggregates for various applications. A detailed mineralogical characterization has been attained by using a multi-analytical approach (EMPA, SEM-EDS, TEM-EDS, Mössbauer, µ-Raman, X-ray powder diffraction, and thermal analysis). Morphological investigation highlighted that the sample is composed of long fibers (> 5 µm) with a significant fraction (ca. 55%) having width below 0.25 µm, considered the most biologically active fibers. Moreover, the crystal chemical characterization showed that Fe occurs at the octahedral sites of the tremolite structure. It should be noted that Fe plays a primary role in the toxicity of asbestos. Based on these results, the investigated asbestos tremolite may be considered a potent mesothelial carcinogen, requiring therefore special attention for public health protection purposes. Investigations using sentinel animals to assess the diffusion of the tremolite fibers into the environment from the serpentinite rocks and soils of Iacolinei quarry are in progress., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
- Published
- 2024
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