Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pjpqr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-29T22:23:03.342Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The respiratory toxicity of airborne volcanic ash from the Soufrière Hills volcano, Montserrat

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

K. A. Bérubé
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Museum Ave., Cardiff CF10 3US, UK
T. P. Jones
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Sciences, Cardiff University, Museum Ave., Cardiff CF10 3YE, UK
D. G. Housley
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Museum Ave., Cardiff CF10 3US, UK
R. J. Richards
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Museum Ave., Cardiff CF10 3US, UK

Abstract

The Soufrière Hills stratovolcano on the Caribbean island of Montserrat has been erupting since 18th July 1995. An enormous amount of respirable volcanic ash has been suspended into the atmosphere by the eruptions and wind re-suspension of deposited ash. The large amount of fine, airborne particulate matter, in particular the component 10 μm equivalent aerodynamic diameter (PM10), is a cause of medical concern. Airborne levels have frequently exceeded the UK environmental standard for PM10, (50 μg/m3), although it is noted that this standard was primarily set for urban PM10. The crystalline silica in the ash is mostly cristobalite, at reported levels up to 20%. The UK government’s Chief Medical Officer, referring to Montserrat, has suggested that long-term exposure to high levels of volcanic ash could lead to silicosis. These concerns have prompted government-funded investigations into the potential toxicity of well characterized volcanic ash samples from Montserrat. Given the well established toxicity of cristobalite, particular attention was paid to the amount of this mineral in the ash samples. Three ash samples were tested: (1) a vulcanian eruption ash, (2) ash released in a domecollapse pyroclastic flow, and (3) ash from a major vulcanian explosion that was wind-transported to, and deposited on, the neighbouring island of Antigua. Comparative toxicological studies were carried out on respirable preparations of these three samples together with appropriate control mineral dusts that matched the major components of the Montserrat samples: anorthite, labradorite, cristobalite/ obsidian and cristobalite. Alpha quartz (DQ12) was the positive control. All samples, including the controls, were characterized to establish particle-size distributions, particle morphologies, and to confirm the mineralogy. Rats were challenged with 1 mg via intratracheal instillation, and groups sacrificed at three time points (1, 3 and 9 weeks). Health assessment was made by examining endpoints of increasing lung damage such as inflammation, permeability (oedema), changes in epithelium, and increase in the size of broncho-thoracic lymph nodes. The data indicate that Montserrat respirable ash, derived from dome collapse pyroclastic flows or vulcanian explosions, has minimal acute bioreactivity in the lung. The feldspar standards showed low bioreactivity, in stark contrast to the cristobalite standard that showed progressive increases in lung damage. These results suggest that either the mass of cristobalite present in the Montserrat ash was insufficient to cause an effect in the lung, or the cristobalite in the ash was, for some as yet unknown reason, markedly less bioreactive than our pure cristobalite standard.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2004

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Altree-Williams, S., Byrnes, J.G. and Jordan, B. (1981) Amorphous surface and quantitative X-ray powder diffractometry. Analyst, 106, 6975.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baumann, H. (1979) Characterisation of silicon dioxide surfaces by successive determinations of the solution rate. Pp. 3047 in: Health Effects of Synthetic Silica Particulates (Dunnom, D.D., editor). ASTM Special Technical Publication, 731, American Society of Testing and Materials, West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, USA.Google Scholar
Baxter, P., Bobadonna, C., Dupree, R., Hards, V., Kohn, S., Murphy, M., Nichols, A., Nicholson, R., Norton, G., Searl, A., Sparks, R.S.J. and Vickers, B. (1999) Cristobalite in the volcanic ash of the Soufriere Hills Volcano, Montserrat, British West Indies. Science, 283, 11421145.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beck, B.D., Brain, J.D. and Bohannon, D.E. (1981) The pulmonary toxicicty of an ash sample from the Mt. St. Helens Volcano. Experimental Lung Research, 2, 289301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castranova, V., Bowman, L., Shreve, J.M., Jones, G.S. and Miles, P.R. (1982) Volcanic ash: toxicity to isolated lung cells. Journal Toxicology and Environmental Health, 9, 317325.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Craighead, J.E., Adler, K.B., Butler, G.B., Emerson, R.J., Mossman, B.T. and Woodworth, C.D. (1983) Health effects of Mount St. Helens volcanic dust. Laboratory Investigation, 48, 512.Google ScholarPubMed
Couch, S., Sparks, R.S.J. and Carroll, M.R. (2001) Mineral disequilibrium in lavas explained by convective self-mixing in open magma chambers. Nature, 411, 10371039.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Forbes, L., Jarvis, D., Potts, J. and Baxter, P.J. (2003) Volcanic ash and respiratory symptoms in children on the island of Montserrat. Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 60, 207211.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fubini, B., Bolis, V., Cavenago, A. and Volante, M. (1995) Physicochemical properties of crystalline silica dusts and there possible implication in various biological responses. Scandinavian Journal of Work Environmental Health, 21, 914.Google ScholarPubMed
Green, G. and Watson, A. (1995) Relation between exposure to diesel emissions and dose to the lung: Pp. 141164 in: Diesel Exhaust: A Critical Analysis of Emissions, Exposure and Health Effects (Health Effect Institute, editors). Health Effect Institute, Massachusetts, USA.Google Scholar
Hemenway, D., Absher, M., Trombley, L. and Vacek, P. (1990) Comparat ive clearance of quartz and cristobalite from the lung. American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal, 51, 363369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horwell, C.J., Brana, L.P., Sparks, R.S.J., Murphy, M.D. and Hards, V.L. (2001) A geochemical investigation of fragmentation and physical fractionation in pyroclastic flows from the Soufrière Hills volcano, Montserrat. Journal of Volcanology Geothermal Research, 109, 247262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horwell, C.J., Fenoglio, I., Ragnarsdottir, K.V., Sparks, R.S.J. and Fubine, B. (2003) Surface reactivity of volcanic ash from the eruption of the Soufrière Hills volcano, Montserrat, West Indies, with implications for health hazards. Environmental Research, 93, 202215.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Housley, D.G. Berube, K.A., Jones, T.P., Anderson, S., Pooley, F.D. and Richards, R.J. (2002) Pulmonary epithelial response in the rat lung to instilled Montserrat respirable dusts and their major mineral components. Occupational Environmental Medicine, 59, 466472.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hurych, J., Hobza, P., Effenbergerova, E., David, A., Simecek, J. and Holusa, R. (1978) The biological action of standard a-quartz modifications and their electronic structure. Abstracts, XIX International Congress on Occupational Health, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, p. 249.Google Scholar
Johnson, K.G., Loftsgaarden, D.O. and Gideon, R.A. (1982) The effects of Mt. St. Helens volcanic ash on the pulmonary function of 120 elementary school children. American Review of Respiratory Disease, 126, 10661069.Google Scholar
Marks, J. and Nagelschmidt, G. (1960) A study of the toxicity of dust using the in-vitro dehydrogenase technique. American Medical Association Archives of Industrial Health, 130, 113.Google Scholar
Martin, T.R., Chi, E.Y., Covert, D.S., Hodson, W.A., Kessler, D.E., Moore, D.E., Altman, L.C. and Butler, J. (1983) Comparative effects of inhaled volcanic ash and quartz in rats. American Review of Respiratory Disease, 128, 44152.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murphy, M.D., Sparks, R.S.J., Barclay, J., Carroll, M.R. and Brewer, T.S. (2000) Remobilization of andesite magma by intrusion of mafic magma at the Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat, West Indies. Journal of Petrology, 41, 2142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphy, S.A., BéruBé, K.A., Pooley, F.D. and Richards, R.J. (1998) The response of lung epithelium to well characterized fine particles. Life Sciences, 62, 17891799.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicholson, R., Hards, V. and Vickers, B. (1999) Montserrat ash: a potential health hazard. British Geological Survey, 14, 1012.Google Scholar
Quality of Urban Air Review Group (QUARG, 1996) Airborne Particulate Matter in the United Kingdom. Third Report of the Quality of Urban Air Review Group. Department of the Environment. 30 pp., London.Google Scholar
Rea, J.W. (1974) The volcanic geology and petrology of Montserrat, West Indies. Journal of the Geological Society of London, 130, 341366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, R.J. (2003) What effects do mineral particles have in the lung? Mineralogical Magazine, 67, 129139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, R.J., Masek, L.C. and Brown, R.F.R. (1991) Biochemical and cellular mechanisms of pulmonary. brosis. Toxicologic Pathology, 19, 526539.Google Scholar
Robinson, A.V. and Schreider, R.P. (1982) In Vitro Toxicity of Mount St. Helens Volcanic Ash. Final Report to the NIEHS on Task 3, Health Effects of Mount St. Helens volcano. Batelle Pacific Northwest Laboratories, Richland, Washington, USA.Google Scholar
Sakabe, H., Koshi, K. and Hayashi, H. (1970) On the cell toxicity of mineral dusts. Pp. 423435 in: Inhaled Particles and Vapours III (Walton, W.H. editor). Unwin Bros, Woking, UK.Google Scholar
Searl, A., Nicholl, A. and Baxter, P.J. (2002) Assessment of the exposure of islanders to ash from the Soufrière Hills volcano, Montserrat, British West Indies. Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 59, 523531.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, D. (1998) Opal, cristobalite and tridymite: noncrystallinity versus crystallinity, nomenclature of the silica minerals and bibliography. Powder Diffraction, 14, 219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sparks, R.S.J. (2001) The Montserrat volcanic crisis: provision of scientific advice for long-term management. Proceedings of the Cities on Volcanoes 2 Conference (Stewart, C., editor). Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences Ltd, Lower Hutt, New Zealand, p. 134.Google Scholar
Stata Corp (2001) Stat Statistical Software Release 7.0. Stata Corporation, College Station, Texas, USA.Google Scholar
Vallyathan, V., Mentnech, M.S., Stettler, L.E., Dollberg, D.D. and Green, H.Y. (1983) Mount St. Helens volcanic ash: hemolytic activity. Environmental Research, 30, 349360.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wilson, M.R. (2003) Pulmonary in ammation effects of environmental and surrogate environmental particles and their components. PhD thesis, Napier University, Edinburgh, UK.Google Scholar
Wilson, M.R., Cullen, R.T., Searl, A., Maynard, R.L. and Donaldson, K. (2000) In vitro toxicology of respirable Montserrat volcanic ash. Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 57, 727733.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yano, E., Takeuchi, A., Nishii, S., Koizumi, A., Poole, A., Brown, R.C., Johnson, N.F., Evans, P.H. and Yukiyama, Y. (1985) In vitro biological effects of volcanic ash from Mount Sakurajima. Journal of Toxicology of Environmental Health, 16, 127135.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed