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• Coal -Tar Sealcoat a Major Source of PAHs <br />to Air and to Children Living Nearby <br />Four new reports examine the contaminants polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons <br />(PAHs) found in house dust, streams, lakes, soil, and air <br />• <br />• <br />Coal -tar -based sealants are emitting polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) into the air at <br />rates that may be greater than annual emissions from vehicles in the United States, according to <br />new reports by the U.S. Geological Survey, published in the scientific journals Chemosphere and <br />Atmospheric Environment. <br />Children living near coal- tar -sealed pavement are exposed to twice as many PAHs from <br />ingestion of contaminated house dust than from food, according to a separate new study by <br />Baylor University and the USGS, published in the journal Environmental Pollution. Several <br />PAHs are probable human carcinogens and many are toxic to fish and other aquatic life. <br />These results and those of previous research on environmental contamination and coal-tar -based <br />pavement sealants are summarized in a feature article appearing today in the journal <br />Environmental Science and Technology. The article is jointly authored by researchers with the <br />USGS, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, University of New Hampshire, City of Austin, <br />Texas, and Baylor University. Links to the four new articles on this topic can be found on the <br />USGS website on PAHs and sealcoat. Coal-tar -based sealant is the black liquid sprayed or <br />painted on many parking lots, driveways, and playgrounds. An estimated 85 million gallons are <br />used each year, primarily in the central and eastern U.S. Coal tar is known to cause cancer in <br />humans and is made up of more than 50 percent PAHs. <br />"The value of this research is that it identifies the pathways by which PAHs move from <br />pavements to people and measures the contribution in relation to other sources," said USGS <br />director Marcia McNutt. "The most striking fording is that pavement sealcoat contaminates <br />virtually every part of our every -day surroundings, including our air and our homes. <br />Scientists estimate that the amount of PAHs released to air nationwide each year from new <br />applications of coal-tar -based sealant are similar to or greater than annual PAH emissions from <br />vehicles. USGS scientists measured PAHs in air above parking lots, with and without sealcoat, in <br />suburban Austin, Texas. In a second study, PAH levels in air and in dried sealant were tracked <br />for one year following sealant application to a parking lot. Two hours after sealcoat application, <br />PAH emissions were 30,000 times higher than those from unsealed pavement. Parking lots with <br />three to eight -year -old sealant released 60 times more PAHs to the air than parking lots without <br />sealant. <br />Coal-tar -based sealcoat causes contamination indoors as well as outdoors. Baylor University <br />scientist Spencer Williams used USGS measurements of PAHs in house dust to estimate the <br />potential ingestion of PAHs by young children living near coal -tar -sealed parking lots. Ingestion <br />of PAHs from food has long been thought to be the primary route by which children are exposed <br />to PAHs. Williams' analysis indicated that children living in apartments adjacent to parking lots <br />