Flint
Water Crisis Caused By Interrupted Corrosion
Control: Investigating “Ground Zero” Home
Posted on 2017-02-01 - 00:00
Flint,
Michigan switched to the Flint River as a temporary drinking
water source without implementing corrosion control in April 2014.
Ten months later, water samples collected from a Flint residence revealed
progressively rising water lead levels (104, 397, and 707 μg/L)
coinciding with increasing water discoloration. An intensive follow-up
monitoring event at this home investigated patterns of lead release
by flow rate–all water samples contained lead above 15 μg/L
and several exceeded hazardous waste levels (>5000
μg/L). Forensic evaluation of exhumed service
line pipes compared to water contamination “fingerprint”
analysis of trace elements, revealed that the immediate cause of the
high water lead levels was the destabilization of lead-bearing corrosion
rust layers that accumulated over decades on a galvanized iron pipe
downstream of a lead pipe. After analysis of blood lead data revealed
spiking lead in blood of Flint children in September 2015, a state
of emergency was declared and public health interventions (distribution
of filters and bottled water) likely averted an even worse exposure
event due to rising water lead levels.
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Pieper, Kelsey
J.; Tang, Min; Edwards, Marc A. (2017). Flint
Water Crisis Caused By Interrupted Corrosion
Control: Investigating “Ground Zero” Home. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.6b04034