posted on 2020-02-12, 16:41authored byAshley
K. James, Susan Nehzati, Natalia V. Dolgova, Dimosthenis Sokaras, Thomas Kroll, Komyo Eto, John L. O’Donoghue, Gene E. Watson, Gary J. Myers, Patrick H. Krone, Ingrid J. Pickering, Graham N. George
Industrial
release of mercury into the local Minamata environment
with consequent poisoning of local communities through contaminated
fish and shellfish consumption is considered the classic case of environmental
mercury poisoning. However, the mercury species in the factory effluent
has proved controversial, originally suggested as inorganic, and more
recently as methylmercury species. We used newly available methods
to re-examine the cerebellum of historic Cat 717, which was fed factory
effluent mixed with food to confirm the source. Synchrotron high-energy-resolution
fluorescence detection-X-ray absorption spectroscopy revealed sulfur-bound
organometallic mercury with a minor β-HgS phase. Density functional
theory indicated energetic preference for α-mercuri-acetaldehyde
as a waste product of aldehyde production. The consequences of this
alternative species in the “classic” mercury poisoning
should be re-evaluated.