Abstract

This article focuses on the relationships between major (Si, Al, Mg, Fe, Ca, Na, K, S, P and Ti) and potentially toxic trace (Ag, As, B, Ba, Bi, Co, Cd, Cr, Cu, F, Ge, Mo, Mn, Li, Ni, Pb, Sb, Sn, Sr, Tl, V and Zn) elements in Ulaanbaatar surface soils and also sources of the trace elements in the soils distinguished by the methods of multivariate statistical analysis. Results of exploratory data analysis of 325 Ulaanbaatar soil samples show the accumulation of Ca, S, B, Bi, Cu, Mo, Pb, Sb, Sn, Sr and Zn in urban soils. The major elements were grouped by cluster analysis in tree associations characterizing main soil fractions: sandy P-(K-Na-Si), clayey (Mg-Ti-Fe-Al) and silty (S-Ca). The factor analysis shows that silty fraction is enriched in major elements of both natural and anthropogenic origin. The principal component analysis from 32 variables extracted nine principal components with 82.49% of the cumulative explained variance. The results of cluster and factor analyses well agree and reaffirm the enrichment causes of potentially toxic elements are a coal combustion at thermal power stations (B, Bi, Ca, Mo, S and Sr) and traffic emissions (Cu, Pb, Sn and Zn). Spatial distributions of trace elements in the districts of Ulaanbaatar city were obtained by ordinary kriging. It is illustrated that the different principal components define the various origins and patterns of accumulation of trace elements in soils. The supplementation of data set by the concentration of organic carbon and the species of elements could help to identify the sources of such elements as P, Ni, Al, Fe, Ca, Ba, Bi, Cr, Zn, Sr and Sb in urban soils more completely.

Highlights

  • Environmental pollution is a worldwide problem that humanity is facing today

  • The present study investigated soils from Ulaanbaatar city in Mongolia

  • The factor analysis shows that silty fraction is enriched in major elements of both natural and anthropogenic origin

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental pollution is a worldwide problem that humanity is facing today. It is well known that the soil pollution can affect human health. Soil is considered as a dynamic ecosystem, able to accumulate and transport many components (including trace elements). Some of those trace elements are natural components of the environment and are healthy for humans, animals and plants. If the concentrations of these elements are significantly elevated in ecosystems, they are recognized as harmful. Different anthropogenic (wastes from different industries and transportation) and natural (soil-forming processes) sources influence the soil composition and the ability of soil for self-restoration (Kabata-Pendias 2011). The urban soils are much more vulnerable to pollution due to a low capacity of natural self-purification processes

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