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Dive into the research topics where Rebekka McIlwaine is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebekka McIlwaine.


Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2014

Comparison of methods used to calculate typical threshold values for potentially toxic elements in soil

Rebekka McIlwaine; Siobhan Cox; Rory Doherty; Sherry Palmer; Ulrich Ofterdinger; Jennifer McKinley

The environmental quality of land can be assessed by calculating relevant threshold values, which differentiate between concentrations of elements resulting from geogenic and diffuse anthropogenic sources and concentrations generated by point sources of elements. A simple process allowing the calculation of these typical threshold values (TTVs) was applied across a region of highly complex geology (Northern Ireland) to six elements of interest; arsenic, chromium, copper, lead, nickel and vanadium. Three methods for identifying domains (areas where a readily identifiable factor can be shown to control the concentration of an element) were used: k-means cluster analysis, boxplots and empirical cumulative distribution functions (ECDF). The ECDF method was most efficient at determining areas of both elevated and reduced concentrations and was used to identify domains in this investigation. Two statistical methods for calculating normal background concentrations (NBCs) and upper limits of geochemical baseline variation (ULBLs), currently used in conjunction with legislative regimes in the UK and Finland respectively, were applied within each domain. The NBC methodology was constructed to run within a specific legislative framework, and its use on this soil geochemical data set was influenced by the presence of skewed distributions and outliers. In contrast, the ULBL methodology was found to calculate more appropriate TTVs that were generally more conservative than the NBCs. TTVs indicate what a “typical” concentration of an element would be within a defined geographical area and should be considered alongside the risk that each of the elements pose in these areas to determine potential risk to receptors.


Environmental Pollution | 2015

The effects of lead sources on oral bioaccessibility in soil and implications for contaminated land risk management.

Sherry Palmer; Rebekka McIlwaine; Ulrich Ofterdinger; Siobhan Cox; Jennifer McKinley; Rory Doherty; Joanna Wragg; Mark Cave

Lead (Pb) is a non-threshold toxin capable of inducing toxic effects at any blood level but availability of soil screening criteria for assessing potential health risks is limited. The oral bioaccessibility of Pb in 163 soil samples was attributed to sources through solubility estimation and domain identification. Samples were extracted following the Unified BARGE Method. Urban, mineralisation, peat and granite domains accounted for elevated Pb concentrations compared to rural samples. High Pb solubility explained moderate-high gastric (G) bioaccessible fractions throughout the study area. Higher maximum G concentrations were measured in urban (97.6 mg kg(-1)) and mineralisation (199.8 mg kg(-1)) domains. Higher average G concentrations occurred in mineralisation (36.4 mg kg(-1)) and granite (36.0 mg kg(-1)) domains. Findings suggest diffuse anthropogenic and widespread geogenic contamination could be capable of presenting health risks, having implications for land management decisions in jurisdictions where guidance advises these forms of pollution should not be regarded as contaminated land.


INEF Cambridge 2014 | 2015

Assessment of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in an Urban Soil Dataset

Rory Doherty; Rebekka McIlwaine; Laura McAnallen; Siobhan Cox

We compare a suite of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (Parent PAHs) in soils and air across an urban area (Belfast UK). Isomeric PAH ratios suggest that soil PAHs are mainly from a combustion source. Fugacity modelling across a range of soil temperatures predicts that four ring and larger PAHs from pyrene to indeno[1,2,3–cd]pyrene all partition strongly (>98%) to the soil compartment. This modelling also implies that these PAHs do not experience losses through partitioning to other phases (air, water) due to soil temperature effects. Such modelling may help in understanding the overall contaminant distribution in soils. The air and soil data together with modelling suggests that care must be taken when considering isomeric ratios of compounds with mass lighter than 178 (i.e. phenanthrene and anthracene) in the soil phase. Comparison of duplicate and replicate samples suggest that field sampling of duplicates dominates uncertainty and validated methodologies for selection of field duplicates and lab splitting are required. As the urban soil four ring PAHs are at equilibrium in the soil phase, and have characteristic ratios that are dominated by a combustion source that is a single controlling factor over spatial distribution, methods that calculate background concentrations can be compared.


Environmental Pollution | 2017

The relationship between historical development and potentially toxic element concentrations in urban soils

Rebekka McIlwaine; Rory Doherty; Siobhan Cox; Mark Cave


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2015

When are total concentrations not total? Factors affecting geochemical analytical techniques for measuring element concentrations in soil

Rebekka McIlwaine; Siobhan Cox; Rory Doherty


7th International Conference on Medical Geology | 2017

Oral Bioaccessibility Of Potentially Toxic Elements (PTEs) In Urban Area Of Belfast

Tatiana Cocerva; Siobhan Cox; Mark Cave; Rory Doherty; Ulrich Ofterdinger; Rebekka McIlwaine


Archive | 2016

Determining Geochemical Threshold Values from the Tellus Datasets: The Examples of Zinc and Iodine

Rebekka McIlwaine; Siobhan Cox; Rory Doherty


SEGH 2015 31st International Conference | 2015

Geochemical data in urban areas: considering depth and analytical techniques

Rebekka McIlwaine; Siobhan Cox; Rory Doherty


International Symposium on Environment and Health (ISEH) | 2014

An Evaluation of Cadmium and Lead Bioaccessibility in the Context of Existing Contaminated Land Management Guidance in the United Kingdom

Sherry Palmer; Rebekka McIlwaine; Ulrich Ofterdinger; Jennifer McKinley; Siobhan Cox; Rory Doherty


International Network of Environmental Forensics | 2014

Source Apportionment and Background Concentrations of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Urban Areas

Rory Doherty; Rebekka McIlwaine; Siobhan Cox

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Rory Doherty

Queen's University Belfast

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Siobhan Cox

Queen's University Belfast

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Jennifer McKinley

Queen's University Belfast

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Mark Cave

British Geological Survey

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Sherry Palmer

Queen's University Belfast

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Joanna Wragg

British Geological Survey

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Damian Fogarty

Belfast Health and Social Care Trust

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Laura McAnallen

Queen's University Belfast

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