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Fluoride 31 (1) 1998 pp 51-52 |
International Society for Fluoride Research | Table of Contents |
UPTAKE OF FLUORIDE INTO DEVELOPING SHEEP TEETH,
FOLLOWING THE 1995 VOLCANIC ERUPTION
OF MOUNT RUAPEHU, NEW ZEALAND
G E Coote, T W Cutress and G W Suckling
Lower Hutt and Wellington, New Zealand
Abstract from Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research.
Section B-Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 130 (1-4) 571-575 1997
In the southern Spring of 1995 (mid-October) the active volcano Mount Ruapehu in the central North Island of New Zealand erupted explosively, spreading up to 40 million m3 of rhyolite tephra over thousands of km2 of farmland during the lambing season. This ash contained a high concentration of soluble fluoride, and more than 2000 lactating ewes died of acute poisoning. To investigate the effects of this brief but acute dose on the teeth of grazing animals we examined the distributions of fluorine and calcium in the permanent incisor teeth of sheep which were one year old at the time. Where part of an incisor had been in the first (secretory) stage of calcification the erupted tooth disclosed surface pitting, a thin layer of enriched mineral across the enamel with as much as 1000 ppm F w/w, and a separate layer with similar to 4000 ppm down the dentine. The part of an incisor which had attained the later (maturation) stage showed enriched layers only in the outer enamel and in the dentine. This study has demonstrated some important features of the calcification process, and the risk of fluoride toxicity to grazing animals
Key words: Fluoride uptake; New Zealand; Sheep teeth; Vocanic eruption.
Reprints: G E Coote, Institute of Geological and Nuclear Science, PO Box 31-312, Lower Hutt, New Zealand.
| FLUORIDE 31(1) 1998, pp 51-52 |
International Society for Fluoride Research | |
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