1 research outputs found
Examination of Metals from Aerospace-Related Activity in Surface Water Samples from Sites Surrounding the Kennedy Space Center (KSC), Florida
Metal
contamination from Space Shuttle launch activity was examined
using inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy in a
two-tier study sampling surface water collected from several sites
at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) and associated Merritt Island National
Wildlife Refuge in east central Florida. The primary study examined
both temporal changes in baseline metal concentrations (19 metals)
in surface water (1996 to 2009, 11 sites) samples collected at specific
long-term monitoring sites and metal deposition directly associated
with Space Shuttle launch activity at two Launch Complexes (LC39A
and LC39B). A secondary study examined metal concentrations at additional
sites and increased the amount of elements measured to 48 elements.
Our examination places a heavy focus on those metals commonly associated
with launch operations (e.g., Al, Fe, Mn, and Zn), but a brief discussion
of other metals (As, Cu, Mo, Ni, and Pb) is also included. While no
observable accumulation of metals occurred during the time period
of the study, the data obtained postlaunch demonstrated a dramatic
increase for Al, Fe, Mn, and Zn. Comparing overall trends between
the primary and secondary baseline surface water concentrations, elevated
concentrations were generally observed at sampling stations located
near the launch complexes and from sites isolated from major water
systems. While there could be several natural and anthropogenic sources
for metal deposition at KSC, the data in this report indicate that
shuttle launch events are a significant source