Abstract Details
(2020) Hazard from Soil Contamination in the Gold Mining District of Kedougou (Senegal, Africa)
Thiombane M, De Vivo B, Niane B, Watts MJ, Marriott A & Di Bonito M
https://doi.org/10.46427/gold2020.2591
The author has not provided any additional details.
13g: Room 4, Tuesday 23rd June 22:06 - 22:09
Matar Thiombane
View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Benedetto De Vivo View all 3 abstracts at Goldschmidt2020 View abstracts at 13 conferences in series
Birane Niane View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Michael James Watts
Andrew Marriott View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Marcello Di Bonito View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Benedetto De Vivo View all 3 abstracts at Goldschmidt2020 View abstracts at 13 conferences in series
Birane Niane View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Michael James Watts
Andrew Marriott View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Marcello Di Bonito View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Listed below are questions that have been submitted by the community that the author will try and cover in their presentation. To submit a question, ensure you are signed in to the website. Authors or session conveners approve questions before they are displayed here.
Submitted by Karen Hudson-Edwards on Wednesday 17th June 10:28
Thank you for your interesting presentation. Have any human health problems that could be related to As and Hg pollution been identified in your study area?
Thank you for your question, which obviously is very relevant. The short answer is "we don't know yet". However, as this is a work in progress, we are in touch with our Senegalese colleagues and trying to retrieve this information, which will hopefully form part of the follow-up study we are currently working on.
Thank you for your interesting presentation. Have any human health problems that could be related to As and Hg pollution been identified in your study area?
Thank you for your question, which obviously is very relevant. The short answer is "we don't know yet". However, as this is a work in progress, we are in touch with our Senegalese colleagues and trying to retrieve this information, which will hopefully form part of the follow-up study we are currently working on.
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