SEGH Events

2012 Joint International Conference: PBC / SEGH

10 April 2012
GIST, Gwangju, South Korea
Joint International conference on behalf of the Pacific Basin Consortium and the Society for Environmental Geochemistry and Health (Asia / Pacific region).

I have been involved in the SEGH as a member for 22 years and become board member from 2010. Currently I am a Vice-President of SEGH Asia-Pacific region and in charge of communication with other regions.  I have got my Ph.D. from the Imperial College, University of London under the supervision of Prof. Iain Thornton. My scientific interest is in the field of arsenic geochemistry and human health issue. I have been involved in arsenic enriched groundwater project of SE Asia as a director of UNU (United Nations University)-GIST (Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology). I am a professor of environmental geochemistry and Dean of School of Environmental Science and Engineering at GIST, Korea. I am the host of upcoming 2012 SEGH Asia-Pacific Conference (10-13 April, 2012) at GIST campus in Gwangju and please find the draft of this conference.  

All welcome !!

Professor Kyoung-Woong Kim, Dean, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST), Gwangju 500-712 South Korea, kwkim@gist.ac.kr

Themes include:

  • Environmental determinants of quality of life, including water resources, sediments and soil pollution and climate change
  • Engineered solutions to hazardous waste including treatment of hazardous substances and regulatory solutions and approaches to hazardous substances
  • Contaminants, including sources in the environment and routes of human or environmental exposure
  • Perception and communication of environmental health risks and social inequality
  • all other environmental quality and human health issues

 PBC & SEGH 2012 Draft Programme Outline

 Day 1 (10 April: Tuesday) 2:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. 

Training Workshop I:

Children's Environmental Health

(Dedication to Jenny)

Peter sly*

David Carpenter

Leith Sly

Training Workshop II:

Environmental Exposure and Risk Assessment in Children

Andrea Hinwood*

Paul Jagals

Training workshop III:

Environmental Geochemistry Research

in Korea

Hyo-Taek Chon*

K.W. Kim

Myung-Chae Jung

Reception

 Day 2 (11 April: Wednesday) 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Opening Plenary: Joint PBC & SEGH session (9:00 a.m. - 10:40 a.m.)

Chairs: K W Kim*

  • - Invited speaker from PBC (William Suk or David Carpenter)
  • - Invited speaker from SEGH (Hyo-Taek Chon)

Morning Tea (10:40 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.)

Environmental Geochemistry and Human Health Issues (11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.)

Chairs: Peter Sly* & Xiangdong Li* (President of SEGH)

Speakers and topic to be determined

Lunch (1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.)

Arsenic: Joint PBC & EGAH session (2:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.) * Afternoon Tea (3.40 p.m. - 4.00 p.m.)

Chairs: Jo Graziano* & K.W. Kim

  • Geochemistry of Arsenic
  • Arsenic & Human Health
  • Animal models of arsenic exposure

 Day 3 (12 April: Thursday) 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Hazardous Waste: current issues in Pacific Basin

  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

Persistent toxic substances: endocrine disrupting chemicals

  • Moderator: M.H. Wong*
  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

APN Project theme I

  • Moderator: S. Suthi*
  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

Morning Tea (10:40-11:00 a.m.)

Hazardous Waste: engineered solutions

  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

Persistent toxic substances: metals

  • Moderator: M.H. Wong*
  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

APN Project theme II

  • Moderator: S. Suthi*
  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • Abstracts

Lunch (1:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m.)

Sustainable urban water quality management (U Arizona)

  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

Emerging Issues in the Pacific Basin: E-waste

  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

SEGH: Soil Remediation

  • Moderator: J.S. Lee*
  • Organic contaminants (invited speaker)
  • Abstracts

Afternoon Tea (3:40 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.)

Water management and remediation

  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

Emerging Issues in the Pacific Basin: health effects of nanoparticle exposure

  • Moderator: B.T. Lee*
  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

SEGH: Risk Assessment

  • Feature topic (invited speaker)
  • abstracts

Banquet (6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. at GIST)

 

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Science in the News

Latest on-line papers from the SEGH journal: Environmental Geochemistry and Health

  • Antibiotic resistance patterns of Salmonella and Escherichia coli in the groundwater of Cyprus.

    Environ Geochem Health. 2012 Feb 5;
    Economides C, Liapi M, Makris KC

    In addition to diet-based vectors of disease, the contribution of water-borne zoonotic agents to gastrointestinal illnesses may be significant, but this has yet to be investigated for Cyprus. Our main objective was to evaluate antibiotic resistance patterns of Salmonella and Escherichia coli in groundwater samples collected at confined animal feeding operations. This is the first report on the occurrence of antibiotic-resistant Salmonella and E. coli strains in the groundwater of Cyprus. Most of Salmonella isolates belonged to the subgroup enterica, whereas none of the E. coli isolates expressed the verotoxin-encoding gene. Out of 27 isolated Salmonella strains, nearly half of them were resistant to at least one or more antibiotic, whereas the highest resistance was exhibited by sulphamethoxazole (85%), followed by streptomycin (39%), and tetracycline (31%). For the E. coli isolates, nearly a third of them showed resistance to at least one antibiotic, whereas the selection of antibiotic resistance was equal among sulphamethoxazole, tetracycline and streptomycin (20%). This study demonstrated that Salmonella and E. coli in groundwater could pose a public health risk via oral ingestion of contaminated water. Best management practices are needed for overexploited groundwater supplies of rural areas, minimizing human exposure to antibiotic-resistant pathogens.

  • Erratum to: Environmental selenium in the Kaschin-Beck disease area, Tibetan Plateau, China.

    Environ Geochem Health. 2012 Jan 28;
    Zhang B, Yang L, Wang W, Li Y, Li H

  • Trace metals in the coastal soils developed from estuarine floodplain sediments in the Croatian Mediterranean region.

    Environ Geochem Health. 2012 Jan 21;
    Romic D, Romic M, Zovko M, Bakic H, Ondrasek G

    Fertile soils in the River Neretva estuary were developed by fluvial sedimentation and deposition of the eroded soil material from the karst hills within the catchment. After extensive reclamation, two reclaimed land zones (fluvial terraces and lower-laying terraces) have been delineated, both used for agriculture. The main objectives of this study were to evaluate soil chemical and geochemical properties in reclaimed zones that differ mainly in topography, soil types and agricultural land use. The origin of the trace metals in the arable soils was studied using multivariate statistics, and interpolation maps of trace metals were produced using GIS and geostatistics. Soil trace metal concentrations do not exceed a threshold value established by the Croatian Government regulation, with exception of copper. Comparative analysis of the main soil properties and trace metal concentrations in the study area showed a pronounced spatial variation and differences between two reclaimed zones in soil organic matter content, bioavailable P and total concentrations of Cd and Cu. Factor analysis in the area of the lower-laying terraces showed grouping of bioavailable P and K, organic matter content and pH (negative loading) in the component associated mostly with the land use. In the area of the fluvial terraces, bioavailable P and total Cd were grouped in the same component that may be explained by the traditional small farm agriculture and overuse of mineral fertilizers. In the whole study area, processes of secondary salinization were determined, accompanied by the raised chloride and sodium concentration measured in the saturation soil extract.