Abstract

While conducting the National Program of Environmental Geochemistry and Medical Geology in the states of Minas Gerais and Bahia, the research team Geological Survey of Brazil – CPRM detected a large area with high levels of fluorine in the geochemical results of the soil, stream sediment and surface water. Fluorine levels were detected by an ion-selective electrode (stream sediment and soil samples) or by ion chromatography (water samples). In this low-density survey, the minimum, maximum and median fluorine grades found at the water samples were 0.005 mg/L, 7.56 mg/L and 0.05 mg/L. For the soil, the samples were 15 mg/L, 1720 mg/L and 152 mg/L, and for the stream sediment, the samples were 35 mg/L, 1076 mg/L and 262 mg/L. The region covers 25 municipalities where studies by researchers from Federal Universities of Minas Gerais and Bahia have detected a high incidence of dental fluorosis, especially where public supply is made via deep wells in the Fissure-Karst Aquifer of the Bambuí Group. Moreover, the study area is highly favorable to the mineral deposit of fluorite and secondary Pb-Zn. Because the area is much larger (99,000 km2) than the other known fluorite provinces of Brazil (Santa Catarina is 2,000 km2 and Vale do Ribeira is 5,000 km2), the designation of Geochemical Megaprovince of Fluorine in the Middle São Francisco River, Brazil, is suggested for this region.

Highlights

  • Fluorine is the main component of the minerals fluorite (CaF2), fluorapatite [Ca5(PO4)3F] and cryolite (Na3AlF6)

  • Adequate doses of fluorine are considered to be medicinal by the World Health Organization (WHO)

  • As shown by the results found in the multivariate statistical analysis, fluorine in sediments is associated with Ag, Mn and Ca in factor 4, encompassing a large part of the proposed province with intermediate and high correlation values, where high concentrations of these four elements occur (Figure 6)

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Summary

Introduction

Fluorine is the main component of the minerals fluorite (CaF2), fluorapatite [Ca5(PO4)3F] and cryolite (Na3AlF6). It is in the health sector that this element is most relevant to the current study. Adequate doses of fluorine are considered to be medicinal by the World Health Organization (WHO). To help reduce the incidence of dental cavities, this element, in the form of sodium fluoride (NaF) or stannous fluoride (SnF2), is included in toothpastes, as well as added to drinking water for public consumption, at a maximum allowed concentration of 1.4 mg/L (above this dose, it becomes a toxic agent that causes diseases such as dental and skeletal fluorosis). According to Rossi et al (2010), sodium fluoride (NaF) is an effective anti-osteoporotic agent to prevent fractures

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