Abstract

To understand the content, pollution, distribution and source and to establish a geochemical baseline of heavy metal elements in soil under the influence of high-density population, the concentrations of heavy metal elements Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Cd, Hg, Pb and Fe were determined in 23 soil samples in Suzhou University, and geo-accumulation index, enrichment factor, principal component analysis, spatial analysis and regression analysis were completed. The results showed the following: The elements Cu and As were slightly polluted, while the other heavy metal elements were not. The elements Cd, Cu, Ni and As in soils were mainly caused by agricultural activities of chemical fertilizer, whereas the elements Zn and Hg were impacted by the chemicals and batteries. The heavy metal elements in the north were lower than in the south of the campus, as a whole. The enrichment of elements Cu, As and Cd was caused by the east–west river on the campus, and the enrichment of the elements Mn, Ni and Zn was induced by the reservoir. Biochemical experiments and vehicle parking influenced the spatial enrichment of Cr, Co and Pb, while domestic waste led to the spatial differentiation of Hg concentrations. The regression curve between heavy metal elements and Fe was established, and the background values of the heavy metals Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Cd, Hg and Pb are 50.90, 489.37, 11.76, 37.74, 55.70, 58.22, 20.07, 0.09, 0.08 and 24.13 mg/kg, respectively.

Highlights

  • Soil is a natural resource with a high intrinsic value for ecosystems and humans that formed the environment with other factors, such as water, air, rock and organisms; it must be conserved and protected

  • We report the latest heavy metal elements in soils from different regions in university campuses

  • The average contents of other heavy metals are slightly lower than the soil background values

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Summary

Introduction

Soil is a natural resource with a high intrinsic value for ecosystems and humans that formed the environment with other factors, such as water, air, rock and organisms; it must be conserved and protected. The chemical elements present in a soil can be lithogenic, pedogenic, and anthropogenic, especially the heavy metal elements contents in soils seriously changed by human activity (industry, household garbage and agriculture) [3,4]. How to eliminate the human impact and obtain the background value of heavy metals in soil are very important for the evaluation of soil pollution. Relative cumulative frequency and regression analysis are mainly used to constitute the heavy metal geochemical baseline in soils [5,6]. Regression analysis is good for revealed the geochemical natural background concentrations of elements without any anthropogenic enrichment. Environmental Geochemistry of Potential Toxic Metals; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 2002

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