Evaluation of public and worker exposure due to naturally occurring asbestos in gravel discovered during a road construction project

Perkins, RA; Hargesheimer, J; Vaara, L

HERO ID

2564341

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2008

Language

English

PMID

18629694

HERO ID 2564341
In Press No
Year 2008
Title Evaluation of public and worker exposure due to naturally occurring asbestos in gravel discovered during a road construction project
Authors Perkins, RA; Hargesheimer, J; Vaara, L
Journal Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene
Volume 5
Issue 9
Page Numbers 609-616
Abstract During a repair and reconstruction project of an unpaved highway in a remote region of Alaska, workers discovered, after construction had commenced, that the materials used from a local material site contained asbestos (variously described as tremolite or actinolite). The regional geology indicated the presence of ultramafic rock, which often contains asbestos. Evaluation of asbestos exposure to workers, their equipment, and living quarters was required, as was the possible future exposure of workers and the general public to asbestos already used in the roadway construction. In addition, a decision was needed on whether to use materials from the contaminated site in the future. Of the almost 700 breathing zone air monitoring samples taken of the workers, 3% of the samples indicated exposures at or near 0.1 f/cc by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) 7400 phase contrast microscopy (PCM) procedure. Thirty-six of the PCM samples underwent transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis by the NIOSH 7402 procedure, which indicated that about 40% of the fibers were asbestos. After classifying samples by tasks performed by workers, analysis indicated that workers, such as road grader operators who ground or spread materials, had the highest exposures. Also, monitoring results indicated motorist exposure to be much less than 0.1 f/cc. The design phase of any proposed construction project in regions that contain ultramafic rock must consider the possibility of amphibole contamination of roadway materials, and budget for exploration and asbestos analysis of likely materials sites.
Doi 10.1080/15459620802289941
Pmid 18629694
Wosid WOS:000259085700005
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword actinolite; asbestos; road construction; road materials; settled dust; tremolite