A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Resolving Geogenic and Anthropogenic Sources of Soil Contamination in Central Tanzania Using Probabilistic and Machine Learning Approaches
Authors: Kazapoe, Raymond Webrah; Mvile, Benatus Norbert; Kalimenze, John Desderius; Sagoe, Samuel Dzidefo; Awog-badek, Darwin Abaanamkadila; Fynn, Obed Fiifi; Konate, Sory I.M.
Publisher: The Korean Society of Economic and Environmental Geology
Publication year: 2025
Journal: Economic and Environmental Geology
Volume: 58
Issue: 6
First page : 771
Last page: 791
ISSN: 1225-7281
eISSN: 2288-7962
DOI: https://doi.org/10.9719/EEG.2025.58.6.771
Publication's open availability at the time of reporting: Open Access
Publication channel's open availability : Open Access publication channel
Web address : https://doi.org/10.9719/eeg.2025.58.6.771
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/508322840
Self-archived copy's licence: CC BY NC
Self-archived copy's version: Publisher`s PDF
Soils in mining terrains are subject to complex interactions between geological backgrounds and human activities, often resulting in elevated concentrations of Potentiality Toxic Elements (PTEs). This study applied an integrated framework combining probabilistic pollution indices, positive matrix factorization (PMF), and machine learning (Gradient Boosted Decision Trees and Artificial Neural Networks) to evaluate soil contamination in the Singida mining terrain of Tanzania. A total of 1,884 surface soil samples (0–20 cm) were analyzed for 12 PTEs. Concentrations showed strong heterogeneity, with right-skewed distributions indicating hotspot enrichment. Pb (mean 25.3 mg/kg; 70% > UCC) reflects regional background enrichment with possible localized anthropogenic enhancement, whereas Cd (0.13 mg/kg; 49% > UCC), and As (1.85 mg/kg; 5% > UCC) show stronger anthropogenic influence. Cr (62.6 mg/kg; 18% > UCC), Ni (23.4 mg/kg; 14% > UCC), and V (61.2 mg/kg; 16% > UCC) reflected lithogenic control from mafic–ultramafic lithologies. Probabilistic simulations (20,000 iterations) showed that most soils were low risk with Pollution Load Index (PLI) mean 0.60; Potential Ecological Risk Index (PERI) mean 59.5; and Nemerow Integrated Risk Index (NIRI) mean 29.5, yet ~21% of sites reached moderate to extreme risk categories. PMF resolved two dominant source factors: (i) a lithogenic Ba–Sr–Pb–Cd–Mn assemblage, and (ii) a ferromagnesian–sulphide Cu–Ni–Cr–V–Co–Zn–As assemblage. Machine learning reproduced these factor contributions with high fidelity (R2 = 0.96–0.99), enabling nonlinear sensitivity analysis and identification of dominant predictor elements rather than independent validation of the PMF solution. These findings demonstrate the effectiveness of a combinatorial approach in capturing both deterministic structure and stochastic uncertainty in soil contamination. The results highlight the need for hotspot-targeted remediation, region-specific baselines, and integration of probabilistic monitoring frameworks into environmental policy for mineralized terrains in Sub-Saharan Africa.
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