A man sitting on a rock wears orange boots and washes a pan in a green tub of muddy water outdoors, with trees and other people in the background.

Study Finds High Levels of Mercury in Indigenous Women

In Scientific American, an IPEN study showing high levels of mercury in hair samples from Indigenous women in Peru and Nicaragua is featured.

The IPEN report analyzed hair samples from 105 women of child-bearing age (18-44) in four Indigenous communities in Peru and two in Nicaragua. All lived along rivers close to gold mining operations, and fish was part of their diets.

An analysis performed at the Biodiversity Research Institute in Maine found 88 percent of these women had mercury levels above the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s 1 ppm threshold for adverse effects from mercury in a developing fetus. All but one had levels above 0.58 ppm, a stronger threshold proposed by a variety of environmental organizations based on research linking low levels of mercury exposure to brain damage to fetuses.

“Rivers are becoming contaminated as a result of the mercury use and gold extraction,” Lee Bell, the lead author of the study and IPEN’s mercury and persistent organic pollutants policy adviser.

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