ABSTRACT
The compositions of humic acids (HAs) isolated from cultivated and forested "Terra Preta de Indio" or Amazonian Dark Earth soils (anthropogenic soils) were compared with those from adjacent non-anthropogenic soils (control soils) using elemental and thermogravimetric analyses, and a variety of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. The thermogravimetric index, which indicates the molecular thermal resistance, was greater for the anthropogenic soils than for the control soils suggesting polycyclic aromatic components in the former. The cultivated anthropogenic soils were more enriched in C and depleted in H than the anthropogenic soils under forest, as the result of the selective degradation of aliphatic structures and the possible enrichment of H-deficient condensed aromatic structures. The combination of variable amplitude cross-polarization (VACP) and chemical shift anisotropy with total suppression of spinning sidebands experiments with composite pi pulses could be used to quantify the aromaticity of the HAs from the anthropogenic soils. From principal component analysis, using the VACP spectra, it was possible to separate the different constituents of the HAs, such as the carboxylated aromatic structures, from the anthropogenic soils and plant derived compounds. The data show that the HAs from anthropogenic soils have high contents of aryl and ionisable oxygenated functional groups, and the major functionalities from adjacent control soils are oxygenated functional groups from labile structures (carbohydrates, peptides, and with evidence for lignin structures). The anthropogenic soils HAs can be considered to be more recalcitrant, and with more stable reactive functional groups which may, in part, explain their more sustainable fertility due to the organic matter contribution to the soil cation exchange capacity.
Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring/statistics & numerical data , Humic Substances/analysis , Soil/analysis , Brazil , Carbon/analysis , Hydrogen/analysis , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Principal Component Analysis , ThermogravimetryABSTRACT
There are difficulties in quantifying and characterising the organic matter (OM) in soils that contain significant amounts of partially oxidised char or charcoal materials. The anthropogenic black carbon (BC), such as that found in the Terra Preta de Indio soils of the Amazon region, is a good example of the OM that is difficult to analyse in such soils. (13)C direct polarisation/magic angle spinning (DP/MAS) at high MAS frequency, (1)H-(13)C cross polarisation (CP)/MAS with total suppression of spinning sidebands (TOSS), and chemical shift anisotropy (CSA) filter nuclear magnetic resonance techniques have been applied successfully for quantifying the different components of OM. However, because pyrogenic materials present strong local magnetic susceptibility heterogeneities, the use of CSA-filter and TOSS make the pulse sequences very sensitive to imperfections in the pi pulses. In this study, the DP/MAS pulse sequence was replaced by a CP with a radio frequency ramp--variable amplitude CP (VACP)--VACP/MAS pulse sequence, and composite pi pulses were used in the CSA-filter and TOSS pulse sequences. In that way, the component functionalities in a humic acid from a BC soil were successfully determined. The spectrometer time needed was greatly decreased by employing this VACP/MAS technique. This development provides an accurate method for characterising BC-rich samples from different origins.
Subject(s)
Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Soil/analysis , Brazil , Fresh Water , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Molecular Weight , Spectrum Analysis/instrumentation , Spectrum Analysis/methodsABSTRACT
Few empirical investigations into the nature of health services utilization fully acknowledge that the home environment may act as a socio-geographical focus of both disease transmission and of learned health behaviour. This paper examines the role of the home environment, as well as of personal characteristics and accessibility, in the utilization of health services in Grenada, West Indies. Bivarite and logit analysis of household survey data are employed to identify markers of high user individuals and households. Aspects of each domain of the home environment (physical and behavioral environment, demographies, and residential mobility) emerge as contributors to the utilization phenomenon in the study communities. Both etiological and socio-economic linkages are postulated to underlie the observed relationships. The implications of this work for health planning in developing countries is discussed. (AU)
Subject(s)
Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Accessibility , Age Factors , Breast Feeding , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Housing , Hygiene , Research Design , Sex Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , Water Supply , GrenadaABSTRACT
In a previous paper (Soc Sci Med 23, 995-1002, 1986), we described the development of a method for identifying households at high risk of childhood diarrhea based on a logit analysis of data collected as part of a diarrhea disease control project in Grenada. In this paper, we report the results of a follow-up study designed to replicate the first using data on diarrhea incidence and risk factors collected in a different set of rural communities in Grenada. The findings of the first study were not replicated. There was no significant association between the risk factors and diarrhea in the follow-up study in contrast to the very strong associations found in the first study. As a consequence, it was not possible to construct a logit model from the second data set. The possible reasons for the contrasting sets of results and their implications for the application of the risk approach are discussed with reference to a two by two true-false table. (AU)
Subject(s)
Humans , Diarrhea/prevention & control , Diarrhea/epidemiology , Follow-Up Studies , Health Education , Housing , Hygiene , Logistic Models , Research Design , Risk Factors , Rural Health , GrenadaABSTRACT
Calls for household surveys to provide information on service utilization in less developed countries raise questions regarding the accuracy and reliability of reporting. This paper compares reported to recorded health service utilization for diarrhoea and any other morbidity over a 2-week and 3-month period for information obtained from a household survey in Grenada, West Indies. A sensitivity analysis is used to derive minimum and maximum estimates of the accuracy of reported utilization. Over-reporting utilization was found to be between 33 and 62 percent for diarrhoea and 49 and 81 percent for any other morbidity. Under-reporting of all utilization was estimated to be between 47 and 65 percent. These results cast doubt on the utility of household surveys as a reliable source of information regarding service utilization. (AU)