Primary Goal of the Research--
To Provide Answers to Mathematical Questions Posed by KEF
- Model the dispersion of particulates of incomplete combustion,
particularly dioxins, in the area near the proposed incinerator.
- Model the path of dioxin through the food chain, specifically
the group of foods eaten by a subsistence farmer in the Bluegrass
Area.
- Model the activity of dioxin in the human body, e.g. the accumulation
of our body burden, the amount of dioxin in our body at a certain
time.
- Model the low-level dispersion of nerve agents GB and VX and
vessicant agents HD in the area near the proposed incinerator.
- Model the activity of the low-levels of GB, VX, and HD in the
human body.
With the cooperation of the KEF and affiliated environmental organizations,
the Chemical Weapons Working Group (CG) and the Common Ground, Drs.
Pearce and Blackburn-Lynch have worked with several Berea College
students on distinct summer research projects which involved developing
mathematical models of phenomena that relate to this environmental
issue of keen local interest.
During the summer research project, Berea College students Ben
Perry and Brian Moyers, along with Drs. Pearce and Blackburn-Lynch,
investigated the dispersion of toxic airborne particulates, particularly
dioxins, in the area surrounding BGAD's proposed chemical weapons
incinerator. The research group chose to use computer modeling to
simulate the air quality impact and ground deposits of dioxins in
the immediate area and beyond. Because computer dispersion modeling
is a frequently used tool for determining particulate dispersion
in many industrial and governmental risk assessments, standard modeling
programs already existed for this purpose. Thus, the research team
chose to work with the then current version of the EPA's Industrial
Source Complex Short Term model which is readily available from
the EPA's Support Center for Regulatory Air Modeling. After developing
a model to predict the dispersion of airborne particulates near
BGAD, the research followed the possible paths the particulates
may take in the food chain with particular interest in the dioxin
levels accumulated in the bodies of area cows. Finally, this allowed
the team to approximate the amount of dioxin that would enter the
bodies of subsistence farmers in the area. The process of dioxin
intake and accumulation in the body was viewed as a simple mixing
problem and was modeled with a differential equation based on the
amount of dioxin in the liver and adipose. The research team used
the computer algebra system, Maple, to find numerical solutions
to the differential equations. The team then input the dispersion
data into these models. This resulted in an approximation of the
amount of dioxins that would additionally accumulate in the body
of a subsistence farmer as an effect of the proposed incinerator.
Berea College students Eduardas Valaitis, Srabasti Dutta, and
Whitney Blackburn, along with Drs. Pearce and Blackburn-Lynch, devised
a mathematical model of the health effects of varying exposure levels
to chemical weapons agents, particularly GB, VX, and mustard gas.
Because it is impossible to have 100% incineration of chemical weapons,
chemical weapons incinerators emit low-levels of live chemical weapons
agent during normal operation, and somewhat higher levels during
upset conditions. With the cooperation and assistance of the KEF
as well as the Richmond Outreach Office, a division of the U.S.
Army, the research group gathered data on the amounts of chemical
weapons that have been released during the operational history at
each of the currently active chemical weapons incineration sites.
Using hourly site-specific wind data available from the National
Weather Service, the research team used the EPA's ISC modeling program
to estimate the chemical weapons exposure levels of local people
living in the area surrounding the proposed BGAD incineration site.
The research team then used the health-effects model to explore
the ramifications of these low-level exposures.
The research might have been possible without the Internet, but
the Internet made access to information much easier. The Internet
provided instant and free access to then Industry-standard software
such as the EPA's ISC (available at http://www.epa.gov/scram001/)
as well as to several useful EPA reports. In addition, the research
team gathered hourly local wind data from the EPA's site (available
at www.epa.gov/scram001/t25.htm). Through email, the research team
sent notes to communicate quickly and directly with the authors
of several key articles and current researchers in the field. For
the purposes of communicating with experts during research, the
Internet has been an immensely powerful device. Not only was the
research team able to keep up with the current thinking of activists
and lawyers through the dioxin mailing list (Dioxin-L), the research
team contacted several active researchers there. The research team
was able to ask questions and offer solutions from the research
on a number of topics to EPA employees (http://www.epa.gov) and
even to a conference of European environmental scientists. This
last group was particularly useful in working out some of the surprising
results of the research. This conference (http://www.hygiene.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/forums/index.cfm?CFApp=2&)
was also useful since it consists of a large group of scientists
from all the world over discussing their research, asking each other
questions, comparing notes, and offering possible solutions to other's
quandaries. |