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Browsing by Author "Filippelli, Gabriel M."
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Item A 4600-year record of lake level and hydroclimate variability from an eastern Andean lake in Colombia(2016-05) Rudloff, Owen M.; Bird, Broxton Williams; Gilhooly, William, III; Filippelli, Gabriel M.Hydroclimatic variability in the eastern Colombian Andes is examined using a decadally-resolved, multiproxy lake sediment record from Laguna de Ubaque, Colombia. Hydroclimate trends are examined and compared to existing local, regional, and trans-Andean records to enhance existing knowledge of Late Holocene Colombian precipitation and assess potential hydroclimatic forcing mechanisms in tropical South America. Sedimentological analyses, including percent lithics, grain size, C:N and magnetic susceptibility are sensitive to hydroclimate and lake level while charcoal size and concentrations reflect fire variability. Results show that deep lacustrine conditions characterized by laminated deposits were not established until approximately 3500 cal yr B.P., prior to which, terrestrial C:N values and unstructured sediments indicate that drier, marsh-like conditions prevailed. Between 3500 and 2000 cal yr B.P., interrupted only by a 300-year arid interval from 2800 to 2500 cal yr B.P., greatly increased overall clastic deposition indicates a broad precipitation maximum while decreased sand deposition and the preservation of finely laminated sediment indicate deep lake conditions. After 2000 cal yr B.P., decreased clastic deposition suggests reduced precipitation, but the continued accumulation of laminated sediments indicates that conditions were wet enough to fill the basin continuously until the present day. These observations address two of the driving questions of Andean paleoclimate: were the northern and southern Andes in vi phase during the Holocene, or out of phase, and what are the main drivers of Holocene Andean climate? We find that the early part of Ubaque’s record more closely resembles southern Andean precipitation records until 2000 cal yr B.P., at which point it abruptly switches to resemble northern precipitation records. We attribute this to a combination of the southward migration of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ), and an increase in eastern Pacific sea surface temperatures (SST). In addition, we find that Colombian hydroclimate records exhibit a bimodal precipitation pattern, which we attribute to their location either on the Andean slopes or in the high interior Andes.Item Addressing Pollution-Related Global Environmental Health Burdens(AGU, 2018-02-19) Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Taylor, Mark P.; Earth Sciences, School of ScienceNew analyses are revealing the scale of pollution on global health, with a disproportionate share of the impact borne by lower‐income nations, minority and marginalized individuals. Common themes emerge on the drivers of this pollution impact, including a lack of regulation and its enforcement, research and expertise development, and innovative funding mechanisms for mitigation. Creative approaches need to be developed and applied to address and overcome these obstacles. The existing “business as usual” modus operandi continues to externalize human health costs related to pollution, which exerts a negative influence on global environmental health.Item Addressing the Need for Just GeoHealth Engagement: Evolving Models for Actionable Research That Transform Communities(AGU, 2021-12) Hayhow, Claire M.; Brabander, Dan J.; Jim, Rebecca; Lively, Martin; Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Earth Sciences, School of ScienceGeoHealth as a research paradigm offers the opportunity to re-evaluate common research engagement models and science training practices. GeoHealth challenges are often wicked problems that require both transdisciplinary approaches and the establishment of intimate and long-term partnerships with a range of community members. We examine four common modes of community engagement and explore how research projects are launched, who has the power in these relationships, and how projects evolve to become truly transformative for everyone involved.Item Analysis of Mercury Concentrations in Indiana Soil to Evaluate Patterns of Long-Term Atmospheric Mercury Deposition(2013-01-09) Crewe, Julie R.; Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Babbar-Sebens, Meghna; Risch, Martin R.Mercury (Hg) has proven to be a risk to the public, mainly through the consumption of fish. Because of this, many fish consumption advisories have been issued in Indiana. Although much is known about the global cycle of mercury, little is known about how local and regional emission sources of mercury impact local and regional mercury cycling. This study’s objective was to determine the scope of mercury concentration in central Indiana by using a broad grid of soil mercury measurements. Sampling was designed to capture the net retained mercury content in soils, and to determine whether spatial patterns in exist in soil mercury contents that could be related to emission sources of mercury and post-emission transport patterns from wind. Results from this study revealed significant differences in mercury concentrations for soils in central Indiana. The core of the study area, concentrated in the urban area of Indianapolis, exhibited soil mercury contents that were 20 times higher than values in the outskirts of the study area. The spatial pattern resembled a bulls-eye shape centered on Indianapolis, and with comparison to the reported Hg emission from local sources, including a coal-fired power plant, indicates a strong regional deposition signal linked to those emission sources but marked by wind-driven transport to the northeast. This effect of local emission sources resulting in local deposition indicates that limiting mercury emissions will have a net beneficial impact on local environmental quality and human health.Item Assessing Unequal Airborne Exposure to Lead Associated With Race in the USA(Wiley, 2023-07-24) Laidlaw, Mark A. S.; Mielke, Howard W.; Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Earth and Environmental Sciences, School of ScienceRecent research applied the United States Environmental Protection Agency's Chemical Speciation Network and Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments monitoring stations and observed that mean concentrations of atmospheric lead (Pb) in highly segregated counties are a factor of 5 higher than in well‐integrated counties and argument is made that regulation of existing airborne Pb emissions will reduce children's Pb exposure. We argue that one of the main sources of children's current Pb exposure is from resuspension of legacy Pb in soil dust and that the racial disparity of Pb exposure is associated with Pb‐contaminated community soils.Item Balancing the Global Distribution of Phosphorus With a View Toward Sustainability and Equity(AGU, 2018) Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Earth Sciences, School of ScienceLimitations in the geological reserves of phosphate rock, the source of fertilizer phosphorus, are not currently considered in agricultural practices or global trade, a very short‐sighted approach considering that there is no “alternative fuel” for plant growth. Thus, it is important to understand the science of phosphorus‐crop growth dynamics as a function of grain type, plant uptake, climate, and past fertilizer phosphorus application history. Recent work on modeling these factors on the global scale (Kvakić et al., 2018) provides the first scientific backdrop for developing an understanding of fertilizer phosphorus balances, and for informing forward‐looking practices and policies that regulate toward long‐term sustainability rather than short‐term profit.Item Breccia of Frog Lakes : reconstructing Triassic volcanism and subduction initiation in the east-central Sierra Nevada, California(2014-03-12) Roberts, Sarah Elizabeth; Barth, Andrew, 1958-; Rosenberg, Gary D.; Filippelli, Gabriel M.The Antler and Sonoma orogenies occurred along the southwest-trending passive Pacific margin of North America during the Paleozoic concluding with the accretion of the McCloud Arc. A southeast-trending sinistral transform fault truncated the continental margin in the Permian, becoming a locus for initiation of an east-dipping subduction zone creating the Sierran magmatic arc. Constrained in age between two early Triassic tuff layers, the volcanic clasts in the breccia of Frog Lakes represent one of the earliest records of mafic magmatism in the eastern Sierra Nevada. Tholeiitic rock clasts found in the breccia of Frog Lakes in the Saddlebag Lake pendant in the east central Sierra Nevada range in composition from 48% to 63% SiO2. Boninites produced by early volcanism of subduction initiation by spontaneous nucleation at the Izu-Bonin-Mariana arc are more depleted in trace element concentrations than the clasts while andesites from the northern volcanic zone of the Andes produced on crust 50 km thick have similar levels of enrichment and provide a better geochemical modern analogue. Textural analysis of the breccia of Frog Lakes suggest a subaqueous environment of deposition from a mature magmatic arc built on continental crust > 50 km thick during the Triassic. The monzodiorites of Saddlebag and Odell Lakes are temporal intrusive equivalents of the breccia of Frog Lakes and zircon geochemistry indicates a magmatic arc petrogenesis.Item Carbon and Phosphorus Cycling in Arabian Sea Sediments across the Oxygen Minimum Zone(Longdom Publishing, 2017-11-09) Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Cowie, Gregory L.; Earth and Environmental Sciences, School of ScienceSeveral studies have focused on carbon, oxygen, and phosphorus dynamics across the modern oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) to constrain how signals of modern systems get “locked in” upon burial. In this study, a sequential phosphorus fractionation technique was applied to surficial and sub-surface sediments from stations at depths spanning the OMZ on the Pakistan margin of the Arabian Sea in order to test the oxygen-carbon-phosphorus connection in modern marine sediments. Some early diagenetic loss of phosphorus compared to organic carbon was observed, but a significant portion of the released phosphorus was retained by uptake on oxyhydroxides and by the formation of an authigenic phosphorus-bearing phase. This process is unaffected by station location relative to the OMZ, and results in an effective organic carbon-to-reactive-phosphorus sediment ratio that is close to the average observed for open-ocean sediments, regardless of bottom water oxygen content.Item Cardiovascular-Related Outcomes in U.S. Adults Exposed to Lead(MDPI, 2018-04) Obeng-Gyasi, Emmanuel; Armijos, Rodrigo X.; Weigel, M. Margaret; Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Sayegh, M. Aaron; Earth Sciences, School of ScienceCardiovascular-related clinical markers were evaluated in this cross-sectional study of United States adults (aged ≥ 20) exposed to lead via the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007–2008 and the 2009–2010 datasets. In four quartiles of exposure—0–2 μg/dL, 2–5 μg/dL, 5–10 μg/dL, and 10 μg/dL and over, clinical and anthropometric markers were evaluated—to examine how the markers manifested in the quartiles. Associations were determined via linear regression. Finally, clinical makers, and how they manifested between exposed and less-exposed occupations, were explored in addition to how duration of exposure altered these clinical markers. In regression analysis, Diastolic Blood Pressure (DBP) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, were significantly associated with blood lead level (BLL). In the occupational analysis, Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP), DBP, C-reactive protein (CRP), triglycerides, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, showed differences between populations in the exposed and less-exposed occupations. Regarding Agriculture, Forestry & Fishing, the duration of exposure altered SBP, CRP, and LDL cholesterol. With mining, the duration of exposure altered SBP, DBP, triglycerides, and HDL cholesterol, whereas in construction, the duration in occupation altered SBP, triglycerides, and CRP. In conclusion, lead exposure has a profound effect on the cardiovascular system, with potentially adverse outcomes existing at all exposure levels.Item Case studies and evidence-based approaches to addressing urban soil lead contamination(Elsevier, 2017-08) Laidlaw, Mark A. S.; Filippelli, Gabriel M.; Brown, Sally; Paz-Ferreiro, Jorge; Reichman, Suzie M.; Netherway, Pacian; Truskewycz, Adam; Ball, Andrew S.; Mielke, Howard W.; Earth Science, School of ScienceUrban soils in many communities in the United States and internationally have been contaminated by lead (Pb) from past use of lead additives in gasoline, deterioration of exterior paint, emissions from Pb smelters and battery recycling and other industries. Exposure to Pb in soil and related dust is widespread in many inner city areas. Up to 20–40% of urban children in some neighborhoods have blood lead levels (BLLs) equal to or above 5 μg per decilitre, the reference level of health concern by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. Given the widespread nature of Pb contamination in urban soils it has proven a challenge to reduce exposure. In order to prevent this exposure, an evidence-based approach is required to isolate or remediate the soils and prevent children and adult's ongoing exposure. To date, the majority of community soil Pb remediation efforts have been focused in mining towns or in discrete neighborhoods where Pb smelters have impacted communities. These efforts have usually entailed very expensive dig and dump soil Pb remediation techniques, funded by the point source polluters. Remediating widespread non-point source urban soil contamination using this approach is neither economical nor feasible from a practical standpoint. Despite the need to remediate/isolate urban soils in inner city areas, no deliberate, large scale, cost effective Pb remediation schemes have been implemented to isolate inner city soils impacted from sources other than mines and smelters. However, a city-wide natural experiment of flooding in New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina demonstrated that declines in soil Pb resulted in major BLL reductions. Also a growing body of literature of smaller scale pilot studies and programs does exist regarding low cost efforts to isolate Pb contaminated urban soils. This paper reviews the literature regarding the effectiveness of soil Pb remediation for reducing Pb exposure and BLL in children, and suggests best practices for addressing the epidemics of low-level Pb poisoning occurring in many inner city areas.