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Featured researches published by Samuel Robert.


Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2014

Assessing human exposure to aluminium, chromium and vanadium through outdoor dust ingestion in the Bassin Minier de Provence, France

A. P. Reis; C. Patinha; Yves Noack; Samuel Robert; Ana Cláudia Dias

The Western part of the “Bassin Minier de Provence”, a former coal mining area, is still occupied by old polluting industries such as a coal-fired power plant and an alumina factory. The identified pollution sources that raise more concern in the population are the emission of gases and dusts, as well as the storage of raw and transformed materials. In 2011, a preliminary survey was carried out in the area as the first step to an exposure and health risk-assessment study. This first survey intends to assess human exposure through ingestion and health risk associated with potentially harmful elements (PHEs) in ground-level dusts collected in recreational areas used by children. Dust samples were taken at 19 sites distributed across the study area, depending on the location of public parks, public gardens, playgrounds and schools. Pseudo-total concentrations of 53 elements were determined by ICP-MS. Bioaccessible concentrations were estimated using the unified bioaccessibility method. This study presents the results obtained for Al, V and Cr, which seem to be related with industry and show similar distribution patterns. PHEs presumably related to traffic or other urban pollution sources are not discussed in this study. The highest total concentrations occur in dusts near the alumina plant that have significant amounts of Al mineral phases (gibbsite and alumina). However, in these dusts only small fractions of the elements under study are in bioaccessible forms. The highest bioaccessible fractions occur in dusts collected near the coal-fired power plant. Further investigation is required to assess potential pathways of exposure and health risk in this area.


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Delayed nitrate dispersion within a coastal aquifer provides constraints on land-use evolution and nitrate contamination in the past

Mélanie Erostate; Frederic Huneau; Emilie Garel; Moritz F. Lehmann; Thomas Kuhn; Luc Aquilina; Virginie Vergnaud-Ayraud; Thierry Labasque; Sébastien Santoni; Samuel Robert; D. Provitolo; Vanina Pasqualini

Identifying sources of anthropogenic pollution, and assessing the fate and residence time of pollutants in aquifers is important for the management of groundwater resources, and the ecological health of groundwater dependent ecosystems. This study investigates anthropogenic contamination in the shallow alluvial aquifer of the Marana-Casinca, hydraulically connected to the Biguglia lagoon (Corsica, France). A multi-tracer approach, combining geochemical and environmental isotopic data (δ18O-H2O, δ2H-H2O, 3H, δ15N-NO3-, δ18O-NO3-, δ11B), and groundwater residence-time tracers (3H and CFCs) was carried out in 2016, and integrated with a study of land use evolution in the catchment during the last century. Groundwater NO3- concentrations, ranged between 2 mg/L and up to 30 mg/L, displaying the degradation of groundwater quality induced by anthropogenic activities (agricultural activities). Comparatively high δ15N-NO3- values (up to 19.7‰) in combination with δ11B values that were significantly lower (between 23‰ and 26‰) than the seawater background are indicative of sewage contamination. The ongoing deterioration of groundwater quality can be attributed to the uncontrolled urbanization development all over the alluvial plain, with numerous sewage leakages from the sanitation network and private sewage systems. Integration of contaminant and water-residence time data revealed a progressive accumulation of pollutants with time in the groundwater, particularly in areas with major anthropogenic pressure and slow dynamic groundwater flow. Our approach provides time-dependent insight into nitrogen pollution in the studied aquifer over the past decades, revealing a systematic change in the dominant NO3- source, from agricultural to sewage contamination. Yet, todays low groundwater quality is to large parts due to legacy pollution from land-use practices several decades ago, underlining the poor self-remediating capacity of this hydrosystem. Our results can be taken as warning that groundwater pollution that happened in the recent past, or today, may have dire impacts on the quality of groundwater-dependent ecosystems in the future.


Regional Environmental Change | 2018

A framework to analyse urban sprawl in the French Mediterranean coastal zone

Samuel Robert; Dennis Fox; Guilhem Boulay; Antoine Grandclement; Marie Garrido; Vanina Pasqualini; Aurélie Prévost; Alexandra Schleyer-Lindenmann; Marie-Laure Trémélo

As in many other European countries, urbanisation and urban sprawl along the French Mediterranean coast are a major concern. Understanding this phenomenon requires both multi-level and multi-disciplinary approaches. In this perspective, this article presents a framework for the observation and analysis of urban sprawl in the French Mediterranean coastal zone. Developed in the context of a scientific coastal observatory with four contrasting study sites, the framework was designed to structure the observation and analysis of urban sprawl dynamics and their driver variables. Although urban expansion is currently slowing in coastal zones, local exceptions can be found and accounted for by historical urban planning and environmental protection measures, local residential tax policies and contradictory perceptions of coastal zones by residents. Our multi-disciplinary initiative is capable of integrating different temporal and spatial scales and has proven relevant in analysing urban sprawl in coastal areas. It shows the need to study coastal areas at finer scales to identify specific dynamics in their local contexts, since these represent the scale at which administrative decisions are made.


Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2015

The mobility and human oral bioaccessibility of Zn and Pb in urban dusts of Estarreja (N Portugal).

C. Patinha; A. P. Reis; Ana Cláudia Dias; A. A. Abduljelil; Yves Noack; Samuel Robert; Mark Cave; E. Ferreira da Silva


Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2014

Assessing the human health risk for aluminium, zinc and lead in outdoor dusts collected in recreational sites used by children at an industrial area in the western part of the Bassin Minier de Provence, France

A. P. Reis; C. Patinha; Yves Noack; Samuel Robert; Ana Cláudia Dias; E. Ferreira da Silva


Land Use Policy | 2016

Local spatial planning practices in four French Mediterranean coastal territories under pressure

Aurélie Prévost; Samuel Robert


MEDCOAST 15, The Twelfth International Conference on the Mediterranean Coastal Environment | 2015

Coastal Urbanization and Land Planning in Southern France

Samuel Robert; Aurélie Prévost; Dennis Fox; Marie-Laure Trémélo; Vanina Pasqualini


Sud-ouest Europeen | 2012

Décrire à grande échelle l’occupation des sols urbains par photo-interprétation. Réflexion méthodologique et expérimentation en Provence

Samuel Robert; Jacques Autran


merIgéo. De la côte à l'océan, l'information géographique en mouvement | 2018

Analyse spatiale des pratiques des usagers de trois plages urbaines de Marseille

Samuel Robert; Marie-Laure Trémélo


Land Use Policy | 2018

Assessing the visual landscape potential of coastal territories for spatial planning. A case study in the French Mediterranean

Samuel Robert

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Yves Noack

Aix-Marseille University

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Vanina Pasqualini

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Dennis Fox

Aix-Marseille University

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