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Week
of July 8, 2006; Vol. 170, No. 2 , p. 26
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20060708/bob9.asp
Asbestos laces many residential soils
Janet Raloff
It
was the mid-1980s, and Terry Trent and his wife, Carol Adams, had broken
ground for their dream home. Atop a hill east of Sacramento, Calif., the
remote, 10-acre site in the Sierra foothills offered plenty of privacy. As
the couple eventually learned, it offered plenty of something else as
well: a nasty type of asbestos known as tremolite. Respiratory exposure to
this mineral has been linked with mesothelioma, a lung cancer that quickly
turns fatal.
Trent vividly recalls his first encounter with the
asbestos. He was working on what would become his front yard. "Operating a
backhoe, I popped a roughly 12-inch diameter vein of tremolite out of the
ground that was maybe 35 feet long. I thought it was some old, ancient
tree root," he told Science News.
Closer inspection revealed a fibrous mat resembling the asbestos that
Trent had seen on insulation pads in his college chemistry class. Gently,
he reburied the rope. His worries mounted after he turned up smaller ropes
of the material throughout the rest of his property. Eventually,
Trent found it poking through the surface in so many places
that he decided to haul in 1,000 tons of clean-fill dirt to resurface his
homestead.
This
solution seemed adequate for 9 years—until construction began on the plot
next to his. Thick dust regularly covered surfaces inside Trent and Adams'
home. The local newspaper, the Sacramento Bee, sent out samples of that
dust for chemical analysis. It confirmed heavy contamination with
asbestos. Pleas to the owner of the neighboring property and to local
officials went for naught, and Trent and Adams' insurance company refused
to compensate them for the contamination.
Finally, the couple did the unthinkable. In 1998, they abandoned the
house, then valued at $650,000.
Meanwhile, as other families moved into the area—the growing suburban
county of El Dorado, where home values can now exceed $1
million—government officials tended to downplay any suggestion that the
soil was toxic. That is, until last year, when the Environmental
Protection Agency told local residents that its data showed worrisome
concentrations of the carcinogenic fibers could be kicked up by normal
activities.
What's more, federal scientists now observe, El Dorado is hardly unique.
Shallow, natural deposits of asbestos occur in 50 of 58 California
counties and in 19 other states.
Although some building-industry groups dispute EPA's El Dorado findings,
federal scientists have launched a campaign to evaluate threats that such
deposits pose to the people living above them.
Personal storms
One
problem in documenting any effects of natural asbestos deposits is that
those needlelike fibers tend to be bulkier than the asbestos fibers used
by industry and so tend not to remain airborne long enough to be captured
by outdoor air-pollution monitors.
EPA
sent scientists, wearing moon suits and personal monitors at face height,
to collect personal-exposure data from the town of El Dorado Hills. Values
were compared with the asbestos measurements simultaneously recorded by
several stationary devices installed nearby, the day before, to sample air
about 1.5 meters above the ground.
Asbestos readings were low as long as the researchers were inactive.
However, playing basketball in a park in El Dorado Hills kicked up 3 to 16
times as much asbestos as was in the air recorded by the stationary
monitoring devices, according to Arnold Den and his colleagues in EPA's
Region 9 office in San Francisco. The asbestos probably came from dirt on
the asphalt surface. Playing baseball, hiking, or biking on unpaved dirt
released even more asbestos, the researchers found.
During a baseball game, "we put monitors on the bases and pitcher's mound,
and they recorded much lower [asbestos] values than monitors on the
runners," he says. The most asbestos—60 times what stationary monitors
picked up in the area—appeared during digging in a garden, Den notes.
Similar data emerged during motor biking at the Clear Creek Management
Area, a recreational site southwest of Sacramento.
Results show that everyday outdoor work and play in these areas create a
"personal storm" of asbestos-tainted dust, says Den.
Industry challenges
Last
winter, the National Stone, Sand, and Gravel Association of Alexandria,
Va., voiced strong objections to EPA's findings. Although the association
doesn't represent home owners or builders, its members' products sometimes
contain minerals that come in both asbestos and nonasbestos forms.
Association spokesman Gus Edwards says, "Our concern is that any federal
regulatory agency ... use sound science to differentiate between [them]."
The
industry association hired a consulting firm to evaluate how EPA measured
and identified asbestos in
El Dorado
County. Last November, the R.J. Lee Group, headquartered in Monroeville,
Pa., reported that 63 percent of the dust fibers that EPA had termed
asbestos in El Dorado Hills didn't meet physical and chemical criteria set
by academic mineralogists and that the remaining 37 percent were largely
inoffensive rock dust.
In
some cases, the fibers' chemical makeup didn't qualify as asbestos, the
Lee Group said. In other cases, it charged, EPA inappropriately counted
needlelike fragments that had broken off a crystal that was too big to
qualify as asbestos. Those fragments aren't asbestos even if they have the
same chemistry and dimensions as those that crystallized as asbestos
needles, the group said.
Arthur M. Langer, a consulting mineralogist formerly of Brooklyn College,
agrees. "There are data by the bucketful" indicating that such cleavage
fragments, as they're called, "are, for the most part, inactive," he says.
On
April 20, EPA issued a point-by-point rebuttal to the Lee Group's report.
"What we did—and Lee attacks us on—is use the public health definition [of
asbestos]" rather than the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
criteria (see "What's in a Name?" below), says Daniel Meer of EPA's Region
9. In other words, he explains, EPA counted as asbestos both the mineral
fibers regulated by OSHA and additional fibers that EPA toxicologists
expect to behave similarly in the body. "In the absence of evidence to the
contrary," he says, "we will assume the human body can't tell the
difference."
Lungs full
Skeptics in the rock-and-gravel industry have pointed out that no formal
study has established that people living over diffuse U.S. deposits of
asbestos or related fibers are acquiring potentially toxic doses. However,
at least three preliminary pieces of evidence suggest risks to people
living near asbestos deposits in El Dorado County and elsewhere.
In
one informal study, an El Dorado County veterinarian collected lung tissue
from two dogs and a cat that had lived in the region for 2 to 9 years and
died from causes unrelated to lung disease. The vet also took lung samples
from a cat that had lived elsewhere. The specimens were independently
analyzed by pathologists Jerrold L. Abraham of the State University of New
York Upstate Medical University in Syracuse and Bruce W. Case of McGill
University in Montreal.
At
the American Thoracic Society meeting last year, Abraham and Case,
specialists in asbestos analyses, reported finding up to 9 million
asbestos fibers per gram of tissue in the El Dorado County animals' lungs.
Those concentrations were higher than those seen in livestock from an area
in Europe where tremolite-tainted soil has been linked to human
mesotheliomas, according to Abraham. In contrast, tissue from the cat
outside the area didn't show any asbestos.
A
second indicator of lung effects comes from Mark Germine, a psychiatrist
in Mount Shasta, Calif., who before entering medical school was a
mineralogist specializing in asbestos. In 1998, he collected soil samples
at six sites in El Dorado County. "I found some very loose, hairy stuff—tremolite
asbestos," Germine recalls. "Although I was really careful, I didn't wear
a respirator," he notes.
The
following morning, he coughed up green mucus, indicative of lung
inflammation. On a whim, he sent some of the mucus to Abraham, who found
it loaded with tremolite. Three months later, Germine washed out his
larynx with distilled water. Under a transmission-electron microscope, the
rinse water "was loaded with tremolite fibers—more than I could count," he
told Science News. He wishes that he'd used a respirator. "I'd never go
back there without one," he says.
Finally, a team led by pulmonary physician Marc B. Schenker of the
University of California, Davis collected data on 3,000 mesothelioma
patients in their state and 890 men with prostate cancer, a malignancy not
known to be related to asbestos. In the Oct. 15, 2005 American Journal of
Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, the team reported that although
most mesotheliomas occurred in people who had worked with asbestos, people
who simply lived near known deposits of rock likely to include asbestos
also had an elevated incidence of the lung cancer but not prostate cancer.
Indeed, risk of mesothelioma steadily declined by 6 percent for every 10
kilometers that an individual had lived from a likely asbestos source.
Living with asbestos
Many
government officials say that it's possible to coexist safely with
asbestos-tainted soils. Some physicians and mineralogists doubt it.
Since EPA officials reported on asbestos-laden dust in El Dorado Hills
last year, the county government has enacted new controls on dust from
construction sites. Home sellers must now disclose the presence of
asbestos in their soil, where known.
Two
decades ago, scientists discovered that large portions of Fairfax County,
Va., also were underlain with tremolite. With housing under development
throughout much of the affected 28-square-kilometer area, the county
quickly developed laws to monitor for asbestos in construction dust and to
control soil taken from the area, notes John Yetman, an official with the
program. As new buildings are erected at affected sites, the surface must
be capped with 6 inches of clean, stable material, such as dirt, sod, or
asphalt. Fairfax's rules have gained national renown.
But
the county doesn't publicize its asbestos problem, and home sellers don't
have to alert buyers about near-surface tremolite, says Yetman. The county
does host a Web site (
http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/hd/asbintro.htm
) that maps affected areas.
Communities are reluctant to acknowledge the presence of asbestos, says
John Puffer, an asbestos researcher at Rutgers University in Newark, N.J.
Several years ago, he identified a deposit of blue fibrous crocidolite—a
highly toxic form of asbestos—adjacent to a nature trail in Mendham, N.J.
"When I pointed it out to the mayor, I expected he would be grateful,"
says Puffer. Instead, the mayor "went ballistic and basically chased me
out of town."
The
federal government, however, has begun taking seriously community asbestos
problems. Bradley S. Van Gosen of the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver
spent a year compiling the accounts up to 100 years old of asbestos
deposits in the eastern United States. Last year, he produced a map of 331
asbestos deposits—some so rich they were once mined—running in a band from
Alabama to Vermont (
http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1189/pdf/Plate.pdf
). He's now at work on similar maps for the Midwest and West.
At
EPA's behest, Van Gosen is also looking into El Dorado County. He and his
colleague Greg Meeker plan to describe the chemistry, shape, and size of
fibers from samples they collected there.
Three years ago, El Dorado Hills asked the federal Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry in Atlanta for guidance on evaluating
risks posed by the asbestos unearthed during construction of a high school
soccer field. The agency determined that some student athletes, coaches,
and school workers had received substantial exposures and that the inside
of the school needed to be cleaned of asbestos dust, says John Wheeler, an
environmental health scientist with the agency.
His
office still hasn't yet decided how to address the bigger question of
long-term risks from low-level exposures to community asbestos deposits,
says Wheeler. The agency is considering setting up a registry to follow
the health of residents in El Dorado Hills and perhaps do autopsy studies
in the area. Other periodic tests for asbestos are also being considered.
"I
think, in general, we've found that [naturally occurring asbestos] is
something that you can live with," says Wheeler. People need to be
cautious where it occurs—keeping their homes clean, for example, and
limiting dusty activities such as tilling the garden.
Abraham is less sanguine about the safety of residential areas overlying
natural asbestos deposits. Indeed, he predicts of places such as El Dorado
Hills, "It's only a matter of time until we find mesotheliomas there."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What's in a Name?
Asbestos definitions can depend upon whom you consult
Asbestos is a term used to describe any of more than a dozen fibrous
minerals. Despite a long history of commercial use and regulation,
controversy still simmers over which fibers constitute true asbestos.
There's agreement that two distinct families of the mineral exist. Most
deposits underlying U.S. communities contain chrysotile, the type
generally regarded as the least toxic. All others, including tremolite,
fall into a family known as amphibole asbestos. Differences between
families trace to their chemical recipes.
The
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the first agency to
regulate asbestos, rigidly defines the mineral by the fibers' length,
width, and length-to-width ratio. OSHA's rules, however, cover only
chrysotile and five amphiboles, including tremolite.
It's
not that those six fibers are the only toxic asbestos types, says Jerelean
Johnson, who assesses potential asbestos hazards for EPA's Region 9, out
of San Francisco. It's that when OSHA established its rules, "they were
the only ones widely mined and used commercially," she says.
Fibers of a different size or makeup may be as toxic as the ones that OSHA
regulates, says Daniel Meer of EPA's Region 9. Therefore, a public-health
definition of asbestos has developed to include fibers not covered by OSHA.
Consider the asbestos contamination at the vermiculite mine near Libby,
Mont. An epidemic of lung cancer and other disease (SN: 7/12/03, p. 21:
Available to subscribers at
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20030712/fob4.asp; 6/17/06, p.
372: Available to subscribers at
http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20060617/fob4.asp) developed among
miners and townspeople. At least 200 of the area's 8,000 inhabitants died
from, and another 1,500 were made ill by, lung diseases initially
attributed to tremolite asbestos.
However, when mineralogist Greg Meeker of the U.S. Geological Survey in
Denver and his colleagues examined asbestos in Libby ore, they found that
only 6 percent was tremolite. Some 80 percent was a chemically similar
winchite, and most of the remainder a related richterite.
Although neither winchite nor richterite constitutes asbestos by OSHA's
definition, Meer notes that the public health community classifies them as
such, because of the evidence from Libby and elsewhere that they trigger
asbestos diseases.
*** POSTED
JULY 10, 2006 ***
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