Arsenic in New England :
A Multidisciplinary Scientific Conference


May 29-31, 2002
Manchester, New Hampshire


Sponsored by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Superfund Basic Research Program


Speaker Anstracts
Poster Session Astracts

Mission of the New Hampshire Consortium on Arsenic

The New Hampshire Consortium on Arsenic was formed in May 2000 by researchers, regulators, and public health representatives from academia, Federal, and State agencies in New Hampshire to work together on the important problem of arsenic in drinking water. Goals of the Consortium include improving the sharing of information among agencies and the coordination of research and outreach efforts, ultimately to better protect the health of the citizens of New Hampshire. This Conference is a cooperative outreach effort of the Consortium.

The Consortium consists of members from the NIEHS-sponsored Toxic Metals Research Program at Dartmouth's Center for Environmental Health Sciences, the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (Region 1).



2002 Conference Organizing Committee

Center for Environmental Health Sciences at Dartmouth - Joshua Hamilton, Co-Chair; Nancy Serrell; Laura Turner
US Geological Survey - Joseph Ayotte, Co-Chair; Debra Foster
New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) - Gayle Bagley; Stephanie Miller
New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services (DES) - Richard Thayer; Bernard Lucey
US Environmental Protection Agency, Region 1 (USEPA) - Patricia Hamlin, Richard Willey

Web Site for Arsenic in New England Conference: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~cehs/ArsenicConference/IndexAS.html



Speaker Abstracts
 
HEALTH EFFECTS OF ARSENIC EXPOSURE IN BANGLADESH: PROGRESS AND PRELIMINARY FINDINGS FROM A COHORT STUDY.
Habibul Ahsan, M.D.

EFFECTS OF ARSENIC ON EXPRESSION OF DNA REPAIR GENES.
Angeline S. Andrew, Margaret R. Karagas, and Joshua W. Hamilton.

ARSENIC IN GROUND WATER IN EASTERN NEW ENGLAND: OCCURRENCE, CONTROLS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR HUMAN HEALTH.
Joseph D. Ayotte, Denise L. Montgomery, Sarah M. Flanagan, Keith W. Robinson, and Laura Hayes.

CELLULAR MECHANISMS FOR THE CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS OF ARSENIC.
Aaron Barchowsky, Nicole V. Soucy, Linda R. Klei, Chandrashekhar D. Kamat.

ARSENIC SOURCES TO GROUND WATER AND SIMULATION OF GEOCHEMCIAL EXPERIMENTS ON AQUIFER CORES AT A LANDFILL, SACO, MAINE: IMPLICATIONS FOR NATURAL REMEDIATION.
John A. Colman, Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, and Forest Lyford.

ARSENIC SOURCES AND PATHWAYS IN THE OVERBURDEN OF CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS.
Rudolph Hon, Kevin Doherty, Thomas Davidson, William C. Brandon, Carol L. Stein, and David F. McTigue.

ARSENIC EXPOSURES AND REPRODUCTIVE EFFECTS.
Claudia Hopenhaun.

AN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDY OF ARSENIC EXPOSURE AND CANCER RISK IN NEW HAMPSHIRE.
Margaret R. Karagas.

ARSENIC: MOVING TOWARD A REGULATION.
Ira W. Leighton

ARSENIC IN GROUND WATER WELLS IN MAINE.
Marc C. Loiselle, Robert G. Marvinney, and Andrew E. Smith .

REMEDIATION STRATEGIES FOR PUBLIC AND PRIVATE WATER SUPPLIES—OVERVIEW.
Bernard Lucey, P.E.

NEW TECHNOLOGIES FOR ARSENIC CONTAMINATED DRINKING WATER REMEDIATION.
Susan Murcott, Jessica Hurd, Tommy Ngai, and Barika Poole.

ARSENIC PROCESSES: EXAMPLES FROM NEW HAMPSHIRE
Stephen C. Peters, Joel D. Blum, Bjorn Klaue, and Margaret R. Karagas.

ARSENIC GEOCHEMISTRY IN A BEDROCK AQUIFER, NORTHPORT, MAINE
Andrew Reeves, Michael Horesh, Robert Marvinney, and Robert Ayuso.

SPATIAL ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN ARSENIC IN GROUNDWATER, SEDIMENTS, BEDROCK, AND AGRICULTURAL LANDUSE IN NEW ENGLAND.
Gilpin R. Robinson, Jr., and Joseph D. Ayotte.

PREDICTING ARSENIC IN WATER FROM AQUIFERS IN EASTERN NEW ENGLAND.
Sarah Ryker.

"EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK": EXPOSURE TO ARSENIC FROM BATHING AND OTHER INDIRECT WATER PATHWAYS.
Andrew E. Smith.

THE METABOLIC BASIS OF ARSENIC TOXICITY.
David J. Thomas.

NATIONAL TO LOCAL SCALE CYCLING OF ARSENIC IN GROUND WATER.
Alan H. Welch and Joseph D. Ayotte.

ARSENIC GEOCHEMICAL BEHAVIOR DURING GROUND WATER-SURFACE WATER INTERACTIONS AT A CONTAMINATED SITE.
Richard Wilkin, Robert Ford, Frank Beck, Patrick Clark, Cynthia Paul, Joseph LeMay, and Robert Puls.



Poster Session Abstracts

DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF ARSENIC, CHROMIUM, CADMIUM, NICKEL AND MITOMYCIN C ON GENE EXPRESSION AS MEASURED BY DNA MICROARRAY.
Angeline S. Andrew, A.J. Warren, K.A. Temple and Joshua W. Hamilton.

PB ISOTPPES, ARSENIC SOURCES AND ENRICHMENT PATHWAYS LINKING SULFTDES FROM MINES AND UNMINERALISED ROCKS TO SECONDARY IRON OXIDES, COASTAL NEW ENGLAND.
Robert A. Ayuso, Nora K. Foley, Joseph D. Ayotte, Ann Lyon, John Bums, Robert G. Marvinney, Andrew S. Reeve, and Gilpin R. Robinson, Jr.

ARSENIC PLUMES WHERE THE "SOURCE" CONTAINS NO ARSENIC: THREE CASE STUDIES OF APPARENT DESORPTION OF NATURALLY OCCURRING ARSENIC.
Richard S. Behr and John E. Beane.

ARSENIC IN BEDROCK WELLS IN CONNECTICUT.
Craig J. Brown and Stewart K. Chute.

A CASE FOR BACKGROUND LEVELS OF ARSENIC IN GROUNDWATER AT THE MASSACHU-SETTS MILITARY RESERVATION.
Jay L. Clausen, Diane M. Curry, Joe Robb, and William B. Gallagher.

A PILOT STUDY OF ARSENIC SPECIATION IN DOMESTIC WELL-WATER SUPPLIES IN MAINE.
Charles W. Culbertson, Deborah M. Moll, Lorraine C. Backer, Mary L. Gilbertson and Andrew E. Smith.

REDOX CONTROLS ON ARSENIC MOBILITY BENEATH WINTHROP LANDFILL, MAINE.
Saugata Dattalt, Alison R. Keimowitz, H. James Simpson, Martin Stute, Steven Chillrud, Monique Tsang, Yan Zheng, Alexander van Geen1 and Greg M. Dobbs.

MINERALOGICAL PATHWAYS FOR ARSENIC IN WEATHERING META-SHALES: AN ANALYSIS OF REGIONAL AND SITE STUDIES IN THE NORTHERN APPALACHIANS.
Nora K. Foley, Robert A. Ayuso, Joseph D. Ayotte, Robert G. Marvinney, Andrew S. Reeve, and Gilpin R. Robinson, Jr.

ARSENIC REMEDIATION OF DRINKING WATER IN NEW ENGLAND: POINT-OF-USE (POU) and POINT-OF-ENTRY (POE) OPTIONS USING ADSORPTION TECHNOLOGY.
Gregory C. Gilles.

THE NATURAL OCCURRENCE OF ARSENIC IN GROUNDWATER AT THE COMBUSTION ENGI-NEERING SITE IN WINDSOR, CONNECTICUT.
Nadia S. Glucksberg, Nelson M. Breton, Hank Andolsek, and Elaine M. Hammick.

COMPARISON OF TWO ARSENIC EXPOSURE ASSESSMENT PROTOCOLS IN A CHRONICALLY EXPOSED POPULATION.
Edward E. Hudgens, Dina M. Schreinemachers, David J. Thomas, X. Chris Le, and Rebecca L. Calderon.

ESTIMATING RESIDENTIAL EXPOSURE TO DRINKING WATER ARSENIC IN INNER MONGO-LIA, CHINA FOR EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDIES.
Richard Kwok, Pauline Mendola1 Zhixiong Ning, Zhiyi Liu, and Judy Mumford.

ARABIDOPSIS MUTANTS EXHIBITING INCREASED TOLERANCE TO ARSENATE.
David A. Lee, Alice Chen, and Julian I. Schroeder.

ARSENATE REDUCTION BY ANAEROBIC SEDIMENT ISOLATES.
Anbo Liu. Elizabeth Garcia-Dominguez, E. Danielle Rhine, and Lily Y. Young.

MICROBIAL ARSENATE REDUCTION IN ANAEROBIC GROUNDWATER.
Kevin A. McCaffery.

ARSENIC IN GROUNDWATER IN MICHIGAN: STANDARDIZED MORTALITY RATIO ANALYSIS AND DEVELOPMENT OF A SPACE-TIME INFORMATION SYSTEM.
Jaymie R. Meliker, Jerome O. Nriagu, Robert Wahl, Pierre Goovaerts, and Geoffrey M. Jacquez.

EFFECT OF ARSENICALS ON CELL CYCLE DISTRIBUTION AND EXPRESSION OF CELL CYCLE PROTEINS IN HUMAN PRIMARY KERATINOCYTES.
Anuradha Mudipalli, R. Julian Preston, and James C. Fuscoe.

EXPOSURE TO ARSENIC VIA BATHING AND OTHER CONTACT IN HOUSEHOLDS THAT USE BOTTLED WATER OR POINT-OF-USE TREATMENT DEVICES FOR DRINKING WATER.
Chris A. Paulu, Deborah M. Moll, Lorraine C. Backer, Raquel I. Sabogal, Robert L. Jones, Mary L. Gilbertson, and Andrew E. Smith.

REMOVAL OF ARSENIC SPECIES BY FOAM FLOTATION.
Zhonghua Pan, Lei Zhang, and P. Somasundaran.

ARSENIC TARGETS THE DEVELOPING RAT LUNG: GENE EXPRESSION ALTERATIONS FOL-LOWING CHRONIC LOW-DOSE EXPOSURE.
Jay S. Petrick, Francoise M. Blachere, Kevin A. Greer, Mark A. Schwartz, Matthew J. Scholz, Omella Selmin, Raymond B. Runyan, James B. Hoying, and R. dark Lantz.

LANDFILL INDUCED REDUCTIVE DISSOLUTION OF ARSENIC AT A MASSACHUSETTS LAND-FILL.
Stanley W. Reed and David I. Margolis.

COST COMPARISONS FOR ARESENIC CONTAMINATION AVOIDANCE ALTERNATIVES FOR MAINE HOUSEHOLDS ON PRIVATE WELLS.
Jessica M. Sargent-Michaud and Kevin J. Boyle.

INTERACTIONS IN ARSENIC BINDING SURFACES; A STUDY USING SURFACE PLASMON RES-ONANCE SPECTROSCOPY.
Diptabhas Sarkar and P. Somasundaran.

AN AUTOMATED ION CHROMATOGRAPHY-INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY METHOD FOR SPECIATION OF ARSENIC IN GROUND WATERS.
Jonathan L. Talbott, John W. Scott, and Marvin D. Piwoni.

INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLE ANALYSIS FOR ARSENIC AND CANCER.
Tor D. Tosteson, Raymond J. Carroll, David Ruppert, and Margaret R. Karagas.

CYCLIC VOLTAMMETRIC STUDY OF REDOX REACTIONS OF ARSENIC.
Zhenqiang Wei, Paul F. Duby, and Ponisseril Somasundaran.

OCCURRENCE OF ARSENIC IN RESIDENTIAL DRINKING WATER WELLS PROXIMATE TO OLD MINE SITES IN NEW HAMPSHIRE: A SURVEY OF FOUR SELECTED MINE SITES.
Michael J. Wimsatt and Thomas P. Ballestero.