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Remediation of Mercury Polluted Sites Due to Mining Activities
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2003
Year
EcotoxicityEngineeringMercury ProblemMercury MiningMining EnvironmentEnvironmental ChemistryMetalloid ContaminationEnvironmental HealthMarine PollutionMercury BiogeochemistryPublic HealthWater QualityEcotoxicologyChemical PollutionMercury ChemistryRiver SystemEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental RemediationEnvironmental ToxicologyMining Activities
During the 500 years of mercury mining in Idrija, large quantities of Hg were released into the environment. Due to chemical transformation (reduction, methylation, oxidation, demethylation) and the transport of mercury enriched particles into the river system and the Gulf of Trieste, the mercury problem is of local, regional, and global concern. The results of some studies indicate that Hg is actively accumulated in terrestrial and aquatic food webs, which leads to an increased exposure of inhabitants frequently consuming food, particularly, fish produced in a contaminated area. In order to understand the impact of mercury mining on the environment and human health, it is necessary to integrate the experience of various disciplines (e.g., chemists, biologists, geologists, hydrologists, epidemiologists, economists, etc.). Political support at the local and regional level in Slovenia and Italy is as well an ultimate requirement for the successful implementation of remediation, based on scientifically based criteria.