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Dive into the research topics where Suzette A. Morman is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzette A. Morman.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2010

In vitro studies evaluating leaching of mercury from mine waste calcine using simulated human body fluids.

John E. Gray; Geoffrey S. Plumlee; Suzette A. Morman; Pablo Higueras; James G. Crock; Heather A. Lowers; Mark L. Witten

In vitro bioaccessibility (IVBA) studies were carried out on samples of mercury (Hg) mine-waste calcine (roasted Hg ore) by leaching with simulated human body fluids. The objective was to estimate potential human exposure to Hg due to inhalation of airborne calcine particulates and hand-to-mouth ingestion of Hg-bearing calcines. Mine waste calcines collected from Hg mines at Almadén, Spain, and Terlingua, Texas, contain Hg sulfide, elemental Hg, and soluble Hg compounds, which constitute primary ore or compounds formed during Hg retorting. Elevated leachate Hg concentrations were found during calcine leaching using a simulated gastric fluid (as much as 6200 μg of Hg leached/g sample). Elevated Hg concentrations were also found in calcine leachates using a simulated lung fluid (as much as 9200 μg of Hg leached/g), serum-based fluid (as much as 1600 μg of Hg leached/g), and water of pH 5 (as much as 880 μg of Hg leached/g). The leaching capacity of Hg is controlled by calcine mineralogy; thus, calcines containing soluble Hg compounds contain higher leachate Hg concentrations. Results indicate that ingestion or inhalation of Hg mine-waste calcine may lead to increased Hg concentrations in the human body, especially through the ingestion pathway.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2013

Linking geological and health sciences to assess childhood lead poisoning from artisanal gold mining in Nigeria.

Geoffrey S. Plumlee; James Durant; Suzette A. Morman; Antonio Neri; Ruth E. Wolf; Carrie A. Dooyema; Philip L. Hageman; Heather A. Lowers; Gregory L. Fernette; Gregory P. Meeker; William M. Benzel; Rhonda L. Driscoll; Cyrus J. Berry; James G. Crock; Harland L. Goldstein; Monique Adams; Casey Bartrem; Simba Tirima; Behrooz Behbod; Ian von Lindern; Mary Jean Brown

Background: In 2010, Médecins Sans Frontières discovered a lead poisoning outbreak linked to artisanal gold processing in northwestern Nigeria. The outbreak has killed approximately 400 young children and affected thousands more. Objectives: Our aim was to undertake an interdisciplinary geological- and health-science assessment to clarify lead sources and exposure pathways, identify additional toxicants of concern and populations at risk, and examine potential for similar lead poisoning globally. Methods: We applied diverse analytical methods to ore samples, soil and sweep samples from villages and family compounds, and plant foodstuff samples. Results: Natural weathering of lead-rich gold ores before mining formed abundant, highly gastric-bioaccessible lead carbonates. The same fingerprint of lead minerals found in all sample types confirms that ore processing caused extreme contamination, with up to 185,000 ppm lead in soils/sweep samples and up to 145 ppm lead in plant foodstuffs. Incidental ingestion of soils via hand-to-mouth transmission and of dusts cleared from the respiratory tract is the dominant exposure pathway. Consumption of water and foodstuffs contaminated by the processing is likely lesser, but these are still significant exposure pathways. Although young children suffered the most immediate and severe consequences, results indicate that older children, adult workers, pregnant women, and breastfed infants are also at risk for lead poisoning. Mercury, arsenic, manganese, antimony, and crystalline silica exposures pose additional health threats. Conclusions: Results inform ongoing efforts in Nigeria to assess lead contamination and poisoning, treat victims, mitigate exposures, and remediate contamination. Ore deposit geology, pre-mining weathering, and burgeoning artisanal mining may combine to cause similar lead poisoning disasters elsewhere globally.


Archive | 2014

Dust and Human Health

Suzette A. Morman; Geoffrey S. Plumlee

It is generally accepted that exposure to fine particulate matter may increase risk for human morbidity and mortality. Until recently, population health related studies examining the effects of particulate matter on human health generally examined anthropogenic (industry and combustion by-products) sources with few studies considering contributions from natural sources. This chapter provides an overview of naturally occurring inorganic mineral dust research and associated human health ailments and some of the challenges in elucidating the etiological mechanisms responsible.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2016

Environmental implications of the use of sulfidic back-bay sediments for dune reconstruction - Lessons learned post Hurricane Sandy.

Geoffrey S. Plumlee; William M. Benzel; Todd M. Hoefen; Philip L. Hageman; Suzette A. Morman; Timothy J. Reilly; Monique Adams; Cyrus J. Berry; Jeffrey M. Fischer; Irene J. Fisher

Some barrier-island dunes damaged or destroyed by Hurricane Sandys storm surges in October 2012 have been reconstructed using sediments dredged from back bays. These sand-, clay-, and iron sulfide-rich sediments were used to make berm-like cores for the reconstructed dunes, which were then covered by beach sand. In November 2013, we sampled and analyzed partially weathered materials collected from the cores of reconstructed dunes. There are generally low levels of metal toxicants in the reconstructed dune materials. However oxidation of reactive iron sulfides by percolating rainwater produces acid-sulfate pore waters, which evaporate during dry periods to produce efflorescent gypsum and sodium jarosite salts. The results suggest use of sulfidic sediments in dune reconstruction has both drawbacks (e.g., potential to generate acid runoff from dune cores following rainfall, enhanced corrosion of steel bulwarks) and possible benefits (e.g., efflorescent salts may enhance structural integrity).


Natural Hazards Review | 2016

Anticipating Environmental and Environmental-Health Implications of Extreme Storms: ARkStorm Scenario

Geoffrey S. Plumlee; Charles N. Alpers; Suzette A. Morman; Carma San Juan

AbstractThe ARkStorm Scenario predicts that a prolonged winter storm event across California would cause extreme precipitation, flooding, winds, physical damages, and economic impacts. This study uses a literature review and geographic information system-based analysis of national and state databases to infer how and where ARkStorm could cause environmental damages, release contamination from diverse natural and anthropogenic sources, affect ecosystem and human health, and cause economic impacts from environmental-remediation, liability, and health-care costs. Examples of plausible ARkStorm environmental and health concerns include complex mixtures of contaminants such as petroleum, mercury, asbestos, persistent organic pollutants, molds, and pathogens; adverse physical and contamination impacts on riverine and coastal marine ecosystems; and increased incidences of mold-related health concerns, some vector-borne diseases, and valley fever. Coastal cities, the San Francisco Bay area, the Sacramento-San Joa...


Archive | 2017

In Vitro Bioaccessibility Extractions from Previously Collected Uranium Mineral Deposit Samples, 1971 and 1981, Southwestern U.S

Suzette A. Morman; Bradley S. Van Gosen; Geoffrey S. Plumlee

This data set provides total element concentration and simulated lung and gastric fluid bioaccessibility from previously collected Uranium mineral deposit samples (1971 and 1981, Southwestern U.S.) exploring possible exposures to other hazardous trace metals. Elevated total as well as simulated gastric and lung fluid concentrations were observed for arsenic, cobalt, manganese, thallium, vanadium and uranium. This compilation was initiated as an effort to gather information about potentially toxic trace elements present in deposits. Increased rates of lung cancer in uranium mine workers (1950 s) stimulated epidemiological studies that concluded the exposure to radioactive radon daughters was responsible but these studies did not examine any potential contribution from exposure to other toxic elements such as arsenic. By examining solubility in previously collected U mineral deposit samples with In Vitro Bioaccessibility tests, we explored possible exposures to other hazardous trace metals.


Aeolian Research | 2013

The role of airborne mineral dusts in human disease

Suzette A. Morman; Geoffrey S. Plumlee


Elements | 2011

Mine Wastes and Human Health

Geoffrey S. Plumlee; Suzette A. Morman


Open-File Report | 2011

Overview of the ARkStorm scenario

Keith Porter; Anne Wein; Charles N. Alpers; Allan Baez; Patrick L. Barnard; James L. Carter; Alessandra Corsi; James Costner; Dale Cox; Tapash Das; Michael D. Dettinger; James Done; Charles Eadie; Marcia Eymann; Justin Ferris; Prasad Gunturi; Mimi Hughes; Robert Jarrett; Laurie Johnson; Hanh Dam Le-Griffin; David Mitchell; Suzette A. Morman; Paul J. Neiman; Anna H. Olsen; Suzanne C. Perry; Geoffrey S. Plumlee; Martin Ralph; David W. Reynolds; Adam Rose; Kathleen Schaefer


Reference Module in Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences#R##N#Treatise on Geochemistry (Second Edition) | 2014

The Environmental and Medical Geochemistry of Potentially Hazardous Materials Produced by Disasters

Geoffrey S. Plumlee; Suzette A. Morman; Gregory P. Meeker; Todd M. Hoefen; Philip L. Hageman; Ruth E. Wolf

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Geoffrey S. Plumlee

United States Geological Survey

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Philip L. Hageman

United States Geological Survey

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Ruth E. Wolf

United States Geological Survey

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Harland L. Goldstein

United States Geological Survey

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Heather A. Lowers

United States Geological Survey

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Richard L. Reynolds

United States Geological Survey

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William M. Benzel

United States Geological Survey

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Cody B. Flagg

United States Geological Survey

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Cyrus J. Berry

United States Geological Survey

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