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Dive into the research topics where E. De Miguel is active.

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Featured researches published by E. De Miguel.


Environment International | 2003

A comparative study of heavy metal concentration and distribution in deposited street dusts in a large and a small urban area: Birmingham and Coventry, West Midlands, UK

Susanne M. Charlesworth; M Everett; R McCarthy; Almudena Ordóñez; E. De Miguel

Results are presented from a study of the distribution of heavy metals in street dusts of two cities in Midland England. The first (Birmingham) is a large urban area (population of 2.3 million), the second, Coventry, a small one (population of 0.3 million). Several trends were identified from Birmingham: higher concentrations were located near industrial areas in the northwest of the city and within the ring road. However, lower concentrations were found to the southwest in areas of mainly residential properties and parks. High values were also identified in association with junctions controlled by traffic lights where vehicles were likely to stop regularly. This last trend was further investigated in Coventry, where it was found that concentrations of heavy metals at junctions controlled by traffic signals and by pedestrian-controlled pelican lights (Mounted Pelican Controller, MPCs) were lower than those found in Birmingham, apart from Ni.


Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2003

Influence of industry on the geochemical urban environment of Mieres (Spain) and associated health risk.

Jorge Loredo; Almudena Ordóñez; Susanne M. Charlesworth; E. De Miguel

This study is concerned with the elemental composition of soils and street dust collected in an historical industrial city of approximately 27 000 inhabitants, where old Hg mining and metallurgical activities strongly affected the load of heavy metals in the urban environment. For the purpose of the study, representative samples of soils and street dust were collected at different locations in the whole urban area (3 km2). Elevated mean concentrations of As in soils and street dust (69 and 135 μg g−1, respectively), and Hg (3.07 and 4.24 μg g−1, respectively), compared to background levels and to those found in other cities, reflect the anomalous geochemical nature of these materials and the strong influence exerted by the old mining sites.


Chemosphere | 2015

Bioaccessibility of metals and human health risk assessment in community urban gardens.

Miguel Izquierdo; E. De Miguel; Marcelo F. Ortega; Juan Mingot

Pseudo-total (i.e. aqua regia extractable) and gastric-bioaccessible (i.e. glycine+HCl extractable) concentrations of Ca, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn were determined in a total of 48 samples collected from six community urban gardens of different characteristics in the city of Madrid (Spain). Calcium carbonate appears to be the soil property that determines the bioaccessibility of a majority of those elements, and the lack of influence of organic matter, pH and texture can be explained by their low levels in the samples (organic matter) or their narrow range of variation (pH and texture). A conservative risk assessment with bioaccessible concentrations in two scenarios, i.e. adult urban farmers and children playing in urban gardens, revealed acceptable levels of risk, but with large differences between urban gardens depending on their history of land use and their proximity to busy areas in the city center. Only in a worst-case scenario in which children who use urban gardens as recreational areas also eat the produce grown in them would the risk exceed the limits of acceptability.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2016

Prediction of the flooding of a mining reservoir in NW Spain.

R. Álvarez; Almudena Ordóñez; E. De Miguel; C. Loredo

Abandoned and flooded mines constitute underground reservoirs which must be managed. When pumping is stopped in a closed mine, the process of flooding should be anticipated in order to avoid environmentally undesirable or unexpected mine water discharges at the surface, particularly in populated areas. The Candín-Fondón mining reservoir in Asturias (NW Spain) has an estimated void volume of 8 million m3 and some urban areas are susceptible to be flooded if the water is freely released from the lowest mine adit/pithead. A conceptual model of this reservoir was undertaken and the flooding process was numerically modelled in order to estimate the time that the flooding would take. Additionally, the maximum safe height for the filling of the reservoir is discussed.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Remediation of aged diesel contaminated soil by alkaline activated persulfate

M.A. Lominchar; Aurora Santos; E. De Miguel; Arturo Romero

The present work studies the efficiency of alkaline activated persulfate (PS) to remediate an aged diesel fuel contaminated soil from a train maintenance facility. The Total Petroleum Hydrocarbon (TPH) concentration in soil was approximately 5000mgkg-1 with a ratio of aliphatic:aromatic compounds of 70:30. Aromatic compounds were mainly naphtalenes and phenanthrenes. The experiments were performed in batch mode where different initial concentrations of persulfate (105mM, 210mM and 420mM) and activator:persulfate ratios (2 and 4) were evaluated, with NaOH used as activator. Runs were carried out during 56days. Complete TPH conversion was obtained with the highest concentration of PS and activator, whereas in the other runs the elimination of fuel ranged between 60 and 77%. Besides, the abatement of napthalenes and phenantrenes was faster than aliphatic reduction (i. e. after 4days of treatment, the conversions of the aromatic compounds were around 0.8 meanwhile the aliphatic abatements were 0.55) and no aromatic oxidation intermediates from naphtalenes or phenantrenes were detected. These results show that this technology is effective for the remediation of aged diesel in soil with alkaline pH.


Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2018

Environmental risk assessment of cobalt and manganese from industrial sources in an estuarine system

Fernando Barrio-Parra; J. Elío; E. De Miguel; J.E. García-González; Miguel Izquierdo; R. Álvarez

A total of 74 samples of soil, sediment, industrial sludge, and surface water were collected in a Mediterranean estuarine system in order to assess the potential ecological impact of elevated concentrations of Co and Mn associated with a Terephthalic (PTA) and Isophthalic (PIPA) acids production plant. Samples were analyzed for elemental composition (37 elements), pH, redox potential, organic carbon, and CaCO3 content, and a group of 16 selected samples were additionally subjected to a Tessier sequential extraction. Co and Mn soil concentrations were significantly higher inside the industrial facility and around its perimeter than in background samples, and maximum dissolved Co and Mn concentrations were found in a creek near the plant’s discharge point, reaching values 17,700 and 156 times higher than their respective background concentrations. The ecological risk was evaluated as a function of Co and Mn fractionation and bioavailability which were controlled by the environmental conditions generated by the advance of seawater into the estuarine system during high tide. Co appeared to precipitate near the river mouth due to the pH increase produced by the influence of seawater intrusion, reaching hazardous concentrations in sediments. In terms of their bioavailability and the corresponding risk assessment code, both Co and Mn present sediment concentrations that result in medium to high ecological risk whereas water concentrations of both elements reach values that more than double their corresponding Secondary Acute Values.


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2018

The paradigm of Circular Mining in the world: the Iberian Pyrite Belt as a potential scenario of interaction

J. A. Grande; M. Santistebán; M. L. De la Torre; J. C. Fortes; E. De Miguel; Jesús María Díaz Curiel; José Miguel Dávila; B. Biosca

Water is one of the receptors most affected by the impacts caused, especially in the case of mining sulphides and, to a lesser extent, of coal. Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) is the main problem associated with these mining operations, producing extremely high impacts, and in many cases irreversible impacts, until now. A new concept of mining can make this activity compatible with the environmental preservation and also to the recovery of the environment affected by the old mining operations that today are in the process of reopening. This new concept implicates the paradigm of Circular Mining as a derivative of the concept of Circular Economy, considered as a strategy that aims to reduce both the entry of materials and the production of virgin waste, closing the “loops” or economic and ecological flows of resources. The present work discusses the paradigm of Circular Mining, focused on the Iberian Pyrite Belt, one of the most paradigmatic metallogenetic regions in the world. Based on some examples, expeditious calculations show the possibility of recovering base metals as well as strategic elements from acid mine drainage, thus obtaining important economic assets.


Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2003

Distribution of Heavy Metals in the Street Dusts and Soils of an Industrial City in Northern Spain

Almudena Ordóñez; Jorge Loredo; E. De Miguel; Susanne M. Charlesworth


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2007

Determination of the geochemical background in a metal mining site: example of the mining district of Linares (South Spain)

J. Martínez; J.F. Llamas; E. De Miguel; J. Rey; M.C. Hidalgo


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2008

Soil contamination from urban and industrial activity: example of the mining district of Linares (southern Spain)

J. Martínez; J.F. Llamas; E. De Miguel; J. Rey; M.C. Hidalgo

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J. Rey

University of Jaén

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J.F. Llamas

Technical University of Madrid

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Miguel Izquierdo

Technical University of Madrid

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Fernando Barrio-Parra

Technical University of Madrid

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J.E. García-González

Technical University of Madrid

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