Abstract

The residue level of 21 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and the temporal changes in this level were investigated in paddy soils collected from particular experimental sites in Japan from 1959 to 2002. The average total PAH concentration in all the samples was 496 microg kg(-1), and it ranged from 52.9 to 2180 microg kg(-1). The residue level of the PAHs was the highest during the 1960s, rapidly decreased during the 1970s, and remained almost constant thereafter. Relatively high PAH concentrations were observed in soils from areas that experienced heavy snowfall and that had relatively low air temperature. The predominant PAHs were phenanthrene, fluoranthene, naphthalene, and pyrene, and their concentration overall and in relation to that of the total PAHs decreased each year since the 1960s. Similarities in the PAH profiles among the locations were determined using the concentration correlation matrix and cluster analysis, and ratios of the levels of specific PAH pairs were also calculated to determine their origin. The collected data suggested that the origins of soil PAHs changed chronologically from the burning of agricultural wastes such as stubble before the mid-1970s to the combustion of fossil fuel and its secondary products after the mid-1970s.

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