Abstract
The effects of contaminated soils on human health have rarely been observed, although models usually predict high exposure from contaminated soil. Such overestimation mostly results from insufficient data on the bioavailability of the chemical, which largely depends on the mobility of the compound in soil and the absorption rate via direct uptake by humans or indirectly via the food chain. It is therefore questionable to regulate soil contamination on the basis of toxicologically derived control levels because the transfer rates from soil to humans are not predictable unless very specific information on the different parameters affecting this transfer are available. Instead, soil control levels should be derived from ecotoxicological considerations or a specific evaluation of the contaminated area should be performed if contamination significantly exceeds the average. Setting soil control levels by considering effects on ecosystems including plants and possibly animals is presently being discussed by the Beratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe and has been proposed previously.
