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Pesticide residue concentrations in soils of five United States cities, 1971--urban soils monitoring program.
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1979
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Environmental MonitoringEngineeringPesticide-residue AnalysisEnvironmental ChemistrySoil PollutionUnited States CitiesUrban SoilToxicologyPesticide Residue ConcentrationsHazardous PollutantsHealth SciencesPersistent Organic PollutantSoil ContaminationPest ManagementEcotoxicologyChemical PollutionEnvironmental EngineeringChemical ContaminantsSigma DdtSoil SamplesEnvironmental ToxicologyMetropolitan Areas
Soil samples from five metropolitan areas including Baltimore, Maryland; Gadsden, Alabama; Hartford, Connecticut; Macon, Georgia; and Newport News, Virginia were analyzed for elemental arsenic, organochlorine pesticides, and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). A representative number of samples were analyzed for organophosphorus pesticides, but none was detected. All areas exhibited heavy soil concentrations of organochlorine pesticides including sigma DDT, aldrin, dieldrin, photodieldrin, chlordane, heptachlor, heptachlor epoxide, endrin, endrin ketone, and endosulfan sulfate. PCBs were detected in three of the five metropolitan areas. Within the metropolitan areas, samples from the urban, or core city, locations generally had higher pesticide concentrations than did samples from suburban locations. Finally, pesticide residue concentrations were generally higher in soils of metropolitan areas than in nearby agricultural soils.