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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 573: 247-257, 2016 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27565533

ABSTRACT

The roots of pyrometallurgy are obscure. This paper explores one possible precursor, in the Faynan Orefield in southern Jordan. There, at approximately 7000cal. BP, banks of a near-perennial meandering stream (today represented by complex overbank wetland and anthropogenic deposits) were contaminated repeatedly by copper emitted by human activities. Variations in the distribution of copper in this sequence are not readily explained in other ways, although the precise mechanism of contamination remains unclear. The degree of copper enhancement was up to an order of magnitude greater than that measured in Pleistocene fluvial and paludal sediments, in contemporary or slightly older Holocene stream and pond deposits, and in the adjacent modern wadi braidplain. Lead is less enhanced, more variable, and appears to have been less influenced by contemporaneous human activities at this location. Pyrometallurgy in this region may have appeared as a byproduct of the activity practised on the stream-bank in the Wadi Faynan ~7000years ago.


Subject(s)
Copper/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Geologic Sediments/analysis , Human Activities/history , Rivers/chemistry , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/history , History, Ancient , Jordan , Metallurgy/history
2.
Ecotoxicol Environ Saf ; 60(3): 295-300, 2005 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15590007

ABSTRACT

This paper considers pollution/toxicological science in an archaeological context. Copper mining was an important activity in southern Jordan, especially during the Bronze Age, Nabatean, Roman, and Byzantine periods, and the environmental legacy of such intensive mining and smelting activities exists today in the form of massive, ancient spoil and smelting tips. The environment was heavily polluted by copper, lead, and other cations during these early periods and the effects of such pollutants continue into modern times. Samples of goat, sheep, and Bronze Age and Byzantine skeletons have been analyzed and high metal loads, from uptake by diverse processes, are reported. Emphasis is placed on the importance of sampling procedure and sample location, bioaccumulation, and the partitioning of such elements. Implications of such pollutants in terms of environmental and human health in ancient and modern times are discussed. Teeth are found to provide excellent vehicles for the monitoring of pollution in both ancient and recent times. Bronze Age skeletons exhibited chemical fingerprints different from those of the Byzantine period.


Subject(s)
Bone and Bones/chemistry , Copper/analysis , Environmental Pollutants/analysis , Lead/analysis , Metallurgy/history , Tooth/chemistry , Animals , Archaeology , Bone and Bones/metabolism , Copper/metabolism , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Environmental Pollutants/history , Environmental Pollutants/metabolism , Goats , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Jordan , Lead/metabolism , Sheep , Tooth/metabolism
3.
Sci Total Environ ; 319(1-3): 99-113, 2004 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14967504

ABSTRACT

Concentrations of 222Rn were measured in ancient copper mines which exploited the Faynan Orefield in the South-Western Jordanian Desert. The concentrations of radon gas detected indicate that the ancient metal workers would have been exposed to a significant health risk and indicate that any future attempt to exploit the copper ores must deal with the hazard identified. Seasonal variations in radon concentrations are noted and these are linked to the ventilation of the mines. These modern data are used to explore the differential exposure to radon and the health of ancient mining communities.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure , Environmental Monitoring , Radon/chemistry , Geological Phenomena , Geology , Jordan , Mining , Risk Assessment , Seasons
4.
Ecotoxicol Environ Saf ; 55(1): 108-15, 2003 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12706399

ABSTRACT

The exposure of a modern Bedouin population living in the deserts and mountains of southwestern Jordan, to metal contamination was assessed via the analysis of sediments, plants, livestock, and foodstuffs. Exposure to copper is demonstrated to be a potential hazard. The Bedouin are shown to be vulnerable to contamination via several pathways, the most serious of which are familiar in the industrialized environments of the developed world.


Subject(s)
Arabs , Copper/adverse effects , Copper/analysis , Environmental Exposure , Public Health , Animals , Animals, Domestic , Environmental Monitoring , Food Contamination , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Humans , Jordan , Plants/chemistry
5.
Sci Total Environ ; 292(1-2): 69-80, 2002 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12108446

ABSTRACT

This paper presents geochemical data from a blanket peat located close to a Bronze Age copper mine on the northern slopes of the Ystwyth valley, Ceredigion, mid-Wales, UK. The research objective was to explore the possibility that the peat contained a geochemical record of the pollution generateD by mining activity. Four peat monoliths were extracted from the blanket peat to reconstruct the pollution history of the prehistoric mine. Three different geochemical measurement techniques were employed and four copper profiles have been reconstructed, two of which are radiocarbon-dated. The radiocarbon dates at one profile located close to the mine confirm that copper enrichment occurs in the peat during the known period of prehistoric mining. Similar enrichment of copper concentrations is shown in one adjacent profile and a profile within 30 m away. In contrast, copper was not enriched in the other radiocarbon-dated monolith, collected approximately 1.35 km to the north of the mine. Whilst other possible explanations to explain the copper concentrations are discussed, it is argued that the high copper concentrations represent evidence of localised atmospheric pollution caused by Bronze Age copper mining in the British Isles. The results of this study suggest that copper may be immobile in blanket peat and such deposits can usefully be used to reconstruct atmospheric pollution histories in former copper mining areas.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants/analysis , Copper/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Mining , Air Pollutants/history , Carbon Radioisotopes , Geology/methods , History, Ancient , Soil/analysis , Wales
6.
J Public Health Med ; 23(3): 235-6, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11585197

ABSTRACT

Heavy metal pollutants generated by mining activities in the Jordanian desert c. 2000 years ago will have had detrimental effects on the health of slaves, guards and expert overseers. The pollutants continue to persist and cycle in the modern environment and affect plants, animals and inevitably the humans who are dependent on both. These findings have implications in terms of the public health of human populations living on or in the vicinity of ancient industrial sites around the Mediterranean and in the Middle East. Some effects of heavy metals on human health are examined; issues of bioaccumulation and partitioning are addressed.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Mining/history , Animals , Copper/adverse effects , Copper/analysis , Copper/history , Environmental Exposure/analysis , Food Contamination/analysis , History, Ancient , Humans , Lead/adverse effects , Lead/analysis , Lead/history , Middle East , Occupational Exposure/history , Soil Pollutants/history
8.
Ecotoxicol Environ Saf ; 43(3): 305-8, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10381309

ABSTRACT

Copper mining and smelting were important activities in various predesert wadis during the Iron Age, Nabatean, Roman, and Byzantine periods in southern Jordan and major spoil tips together with slag heaps remain as a legacy of such enterprises. Barley has grown in the area for a prolonged period and currently wild barley plants are affected by toxic cations, which reduce their yields. It is considered that such plants provide an adequate model to assess how similar plants would have performed, in terms of productivity, in the past. The population of miners/slaves, guards, etc., would have been subject to bioaccumulation of heavy metals, which conceivably would have led to detrimental effects on their health. Inhalation and ingestion of particulate pollutants cannot be discounted. It is argued that the population may have been further weakened as a consequence of food shortage, due to reduced plant productivity, as cereals are important foods for both humans and the animals upon which they are dependent. A sizeable mining community could only have been maintained by large-scale importation of food or a massive intensification of agricultural activity.


Subject(s)
Anthropology , Environmental Pollution/history , Mining , Agriculture , Animals , Copper/analysis , History, Ancient , Hordeum/chemistry , Humans , Jordan , Sheep/metabolism
9.
Cancer Res ; 50(20): 6600-7, 1990 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2208122

ABSTRACT

A novel method for linking Adriamycin (ADM) to monoclonal antibodies is described in which the 13-keto position of the anthracycline is used as the attachment site to the linker arm. A new ADM acylhydrazone derivative, Adriamycin 13-[3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionyl]hydrazone hydrochloride, which contains a pyridyl-protected disulfide, was synthesized and used for conjugation to monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that were thiolated with N-succinimidyl 3-(pyridyldithiol)propionate or 2-iminothiolane. This resulted in formation of a linker between MAb and drug that contained a disulfide bond. Conjugation conditions were optimized to yield conjugates with high ADM:MAb molar ratios. The final immunoconjugate yields were found to decrease as the ADM:MAb molar ratio of the conjugates increased. Stability studies indicated that ADM was released from the immunoconjugates at mildly acidic pHs ranging from 4.5-6.5. Treatment of immunoconjugates with mild reducing agent dithiothreitol resulted in release of an acylhydrazone derivative of ADM. Flow-cytometric studies showed that the binding activity of various MAbs following conjugation to ADM was preserved at ADM:MAb molar ratios up to 10. Antibody-directed cytotoxicity was demonstrated under several assay conditions using combinations of antigen-positive and antigen-negative cells and binding and nonbinding immunoconjugates. In several experiments, ADM immunoconjugates were more potent than equivalent amounts of unconjugated ADM.


Subject(s)
Doxorubicin/pharmacology , Immunotoxins/pharmacology , Antibodies, Monoclonal , Cell Survival/drug effects , Dithiothreitol/pharmacology , Doxorubicin/administration & dosage , Drug Stability , Humans , Hydrazones , Immunotoxins/chemical synthesis , Tumor Cells, Cultured/drug effects
10.
J Cancer Res Clin Oncol ; 115(4): 351-60, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2503520

ABSTRACT

Antinucleolar antisera were raised in rabbits, goats and sheep to nucleoli isolated from three human tumor cell lines. The antisera were shown to cross-react by immunofluorescence with human tumor cell lines originating from different organs and with frozen sections from a wide variety of human malignant and non-malignant tissues. Tumor versus normal tissue discrimination by several antisera was significantly improved by treatment of frozen tissues with a buffered glutaraldehyde/Triton X-100 solution prior to immunofluorescent staining. The molecular specificity of these antisera was determined by immunostaining electrotransfer nitrocellulose strips following SDS-PAGE of nucleolar preparations and nuclear extracts. Although different immunostaining patterns were obtained for individual antinucleolar antisera, nucleolar proteins of molecular weight 120, 100, 94, 68, 54, 38, 33, and 32 kDa were the most often recognized by antisera raised in the three different species. G187 antiserum strongly reacted with 100, 94, and 38 kDa proteins from freshly obtained leukemic specimens. The Immunoreactivity of the 100, 94, and 38 kDa proteins was unaffected by glutaraldehyde/Triton X-100 treatment when immunostained with antisera that demonstrated the greatest tumor specificity on sections treated with glutaraldehyde/Triton X-100. These three nucleolar proteins may be more highly associated with nucleoli of malignant cells than with nucleoli of normal cells.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Neoplasm/analysis , Cell Nucleolus/immunology , Immune Sera/immunology , Animals , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Glutaral/pharmacology , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Nuclear Proteins/analysis , Rabbits , Tumor Cells, Cultured
11.
Vox Sang ; 51(4): 324-6, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3798867

ABSTRACT

Red blood cell antibody elutions are often routinely performed whenever a positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT) is encountered. To evaluate the efficacy of performing routine red-cell elutions we reviewed our antibody elution data. Of 122 eluates, 83 were negative, 35 were warm panagglutinins, 2 were felt to be transfusion-induced alloantibodies, 1 was passively acquired anti-A, and 1 was inconclusive. One of the eluted alloantibodies was not demonstrable in the serum. Thus, only 1 (0.8%) of the eluates provided important information not readily available through serum testing alone. We conclude that extensive serologic evaluation of a positive DAT should be reserved for those patients who have been recently transfused or are suspected of having immune hemolysis.


Subject(s)
Erythrocytes/immunology , Hemagglutinins/analysis , Agglutinins/analysis , Antibody Specificity , Autoantibodies/analysis , Blood Transfusion , Coombs Test , Cryoglobulins , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/analysis , Isoantibodies/analysis
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