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Right arrow Air Pollution

Air Pollution by Concrete Dust from the Great Hanshin Earthquake

Takao Gotoh*,a, Takashi Nishimurab, Minoru Nakatab, Yuzuru Nakaguchib and Keizo Hirakib

a Faculty of Engineering, Kobe Univ., Kobe, Japan
b Institution for Social Medicine, Yodogawa Workers' Welfare Association, Osaka, Japan



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Fig. 1. Total number of demolished structures and structures demolished per month after the Hanshin earthquake.

 


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Fig. 2. Local distribution of the demolished structures within six months after the earthquake. Broken line is the barrier between cities; dotted line is the barrier between Ku zones.

 


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Fig. 3. Five demolition work sites (A, B, C, D, and E) around Japanese Railway Sannomiya Station, the sampling sites (a, b, c, d, and e), and the measured values of total suspended particulate (TSP) concentration.

 


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Fig. 4. Relationship between the pH and electrical conductivity (EC) values of three samples measured (A, B, and C), and those of the standard block samples.

 





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