A piece of manuscript describes the distribution, fate and transport of tungsten used in training rounds at three small arms ranges at Camp
Edwards on the Massachusetts Military Reservation (MMR), USA. Practice
with tungsten/nylon rounds began in 2000 subsequent to a 1997 US
Environmental Protection Agency ban on training with lead. Training with
the tungsten rounds was halted in 2005 because of concerns regarding tungsten's environmental mobility and potential toxicity. This study,
therefore, examines how tungsten partitions in the environment when
fired on a small arms training range. Soil sampling revealed surface
soil concentrations, highest at the berm face, up to 2080 mg/kg.
Concentrations decreased rapidly with depth--at least by an order of
magnitude by 25 cm. Nonetheless, tungsten concentrations remained above
background to at least 150 cm. Pore-water samples from lysimeters
installed in berm areas revealed a range of concentrations (<1-400
mg/L) elevated with respect to background although there was no
discernable trend with depth. Groundwater monitoring well samples
collected approximately 30 m below ground surface showed tungsten
(0.001-0.56 mg/L) attributable to range use.
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