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Featured researches published by Piotr Fabijańczyk.


International Journal of Environment and Pollution | 2008

The geostatistical reassessment of soil contamination with lead in metropolitan Warsaw and its vicinity

Jarosław Zawadzki; Piotr Fabijańczyk

Soils of urban agglomerations are often exposed to pollution with lead, which high concentrations are frequently observed. The main sources of lead contamination are airborne particulate depositions and exhaust fumes. The study area encompassed Warsaw city, outskirts and fragments of Kampinoski National and Mazowiecki Landscape Parks. The scope of the study was to analyse the spatial distribution of lead content in soils using ordinary kriging and sequential Gaussian simulation, distinct from previously applied (in 1992) the least curvature method. Results show that lead concentrations are relatively low and only a few areas are characterised by high risk of contamination.


Chemosphere | 2018

Impact of an iron mine and a nickel smelter at the Norwegian/Russian border close to the Barents Sea on surface soil magnetic susceptibility and content of potentially toxic elements

Tadeusz Magiera; Jarosław Zawadzki; Marcin Szuszkiewicz; Piotr Fabijańczyk; Eiliv Steinnes; Karl Fabian; Ewa Miszczak

An important problem in soil magnetometry is unraveling the soil contamination signal in areas with multiple emitters. Here, geophysical and geochemical measurements were performed at four sites on a north - south transect along the Pasvik River in the Barents Region (northern Norway). These sites are influenced by depositions from the Bjørnevatn iron mine and a Ni-Cu smelter in Nikel, Russia. To relate the degree and type of pollution from these sources to the corresponding magnetic signal, the topsoil concentrations of 12 Potentially Toxic Elements (PTEs) (As, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mo, Ni, Pb, Se, Ti, Zn), were determined, magnetic hysteresis parameters and thermomagnetic properties were measured. In situ magnetic low-field susceptibility decreases from north to south with increasing distance from the iron mine. Relatively large magnetic multidomain grains of magnetite and/or titanomagnetite are responsible for the strong magnetic signal from the topsoil close to Bjørnevatn. These particles are related to increased enrichment factors of As, Mo and Cu, yielding high positive correlation coefficients with susceptibility values. At a site furthest away from the iron mine and located 7 km from the Ni-Cu smelter magnetic susceptibility values are much lower but significant positive correlations on the level of p < .1 with 8 PTEs (Ni, Cu, Co, Se, As, Zn, Cd, Cr) have been observed. The magnetic signal in this area is due to fine-grained primary sulphides and secondary fine-grained magnetite and/or maghemite.


Open Geosciences | 2016

Geostatistical study of spatial correlations of lead and zinc concentration in urban reservoir. Study case Czerniakowskie Lake, Warsaw, Poland

Piotr Fabijańczyk; Jarosław Zawadzki; Małgorzata Wojtkowska

Abstract The article presents detailed geostatistical analysis of spatial distribution of lead and zinc concentration in water, suspension and bottom sediments of large, urban lake exposed to intensive anthropogenic pressure within a large city. Systematic chemical measurements were performed at eleven cross-sections located along Czerniakowskie Lake, the largest lake in Warsaw, the capital of Poland. During the summer, the lake is used as a public bathing area, therefore, to better evaluate human impacts, field measurements were carried out in high-use seasons. It was found that the spatial distributions of aqueous lead and zinc differ during the summer and autumn. In summer several Pb and Zn hot-spots were observed, while during autumn spatial distributions of Pb and Zn were rather homogenous throughout the entire lake. Large seasonal differences in spatial distributions of Pb and Zn were found in bottom sediments. Autumn concentrations of both heavy metals were ten times higher in comparison with summer values. Clear cross-correlations of Pb and Zn concentrations in water, suspension and bottom sediments suggest that both Pb and Zn came to Czerniakowskie Lake from the same source.


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2010

Study of litter influence on magnetic susceptibility measurements of urban forest topsoils using the MS2D sensor

Jarosław Zawadzki; Piotr Fabijańczyk; Tadeusz Magiera; Zygmunt Strzyszcz


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2012

Geostatistical 3-dimensional integration of measurements of soil magnetic susceptibility

Jarosław Zawadzki; Tadeusz Magiera; Piotr Fabijańczyk; Grzegorz Kusza


Studia Geophysica Et Geodaetica | 2009

Geostatistical evaluation of magnetic indicators of forest soil contamination with heavy metals

Jarosław Zawadzki; Tadeus Magiera; Piotr Fabijańczyk


Studia Geophysica Et Geodaetica | 2007

USE OF VARIOGRAMS FOR FIELD MAGNETOMETRY ANALYSIS IN UPPER SILESIA INDUSTRIAL REGION

Jarosław Zawadzki; Piotr Fabijańczyk


Polish Journal of Soil Science | 2007

The influence of forest stand and organic horizon development on soil surface measurement of magnetic susceptibility

Aw Zawadzki; Piotr Fabijańczyk; Tadeusz Magiera


Geoderma | 2016

A methodology of integration of magnetometric and geochemical soil contamination measurements

Piotr Fabijańczyk; Jarosław Zawadzki; Tadeusz Magiera; Marcin Szuszkiewicz


Water Air and Soil Pollution | 2015

Geostatistical Microscale Study of Magnetic Susceptibility in Soil Profile and Magnetic Indicators of Potential Soil Pollution.

Jarosław Zawadzki; Piotr Fabijańczyk; Tadeusz Magiera; Marzena Rachwał

Collaboration


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Jarosław Zawadzki

Warsaw University of Technology

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Tadeusz Magiera

Polish Academy of Sciences

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H. Badura

Silesian University of Technology

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Marzena Rachwał

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Ewa Miszczak

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Zygmunt Strzyszcz

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Eiliv Steinnes

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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