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38 pages, 6209 KB  
Article
Transforming Landfill Compensation Policy in Bantargebang, Indonesia: An Environmental Justice Perspective
by Wahyu Pratama Tamba, Bambang Shergi Laksmono, Sari Viciawati Machdum and Dumanita Tamba
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4204; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094204 - 23 Apr 2026
Viewed by 251
Abstract
This study explores the environmental justice issues associated with landfill compensation policies in Bantargebang, Indonesia. Although compensation programs have been implemented for many years, communities living near landfills continue to experience ongoing environmental damage and significant health concerns. Using a qualitative descriptive method, [...] Read more.
This study explores the environmental justice issues associated with landfill compensation policies in Bantargebang, Indonesia. Although compensation programs have been implemented for many years, communities living near landfills continue to experience ongoing environmental damage and significant health concerns. Using a qualitative descriptive method, this research explores systemic barriers through in-depth interviews, observations, and water quality analysis. The findings indicate that labeling the program as “Social Assistance” within the Local Government Information System (SIPD) redefines ecological compensation as a fixed form of charity, rather than as a mechanism for genuine environmental restitution. Laboratory data show severe bacteriological contamination, with Total Coliform levels reaching 95%, forcing residents to bear substantial “hidden costs” for clean water, perpetuating a cycle of financial dependence. The growing normalization of health hazards is evident in over 5000 annual cases of acute respiratory infections, and the deadly landslide in March 2026, in which claimed seven lives and injured six others. These incidents underscore the failure of existing remediation approaches to safeguard human dignity and well-being. To address these shortcomings, this study proposes the adoption of an Integrated Compensation Model based on Green Social Work. This model emphasizes structural investment, spatial risk-based indices using quantitative data, and budget coding adjustments within the SIPD. This approach highlights the urgent need to move beyond temporary charitable assistance and instead pursue meaningful environmental justice, while positioning social workers as “Social-Ecological Brokers” who help restore dignity and well-being in communities often treated as “sacrifice zones.” Full article
14 pages, 889 KB  
Systematic Review
Tailored Interventional Approaches to the Management of True and False Aneurysms Affecting Aberrant Visceral Arteries Are Associated with Enhanced Clinical Outcomes
by Ottavia Borghese, Arisa Ibrahimi, Antonio Luparelli, Giulia Piermarini and Yamume Tshomba
J. Pers. Med. 2026, 16(3), 165; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm16030165 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 394
Abstract
Background: Anatomical variations in visceral arteries are not so uncommon (up to 20% of cases in general population), with splenic and hepatic artery anomalies being the most frequently reported. Aberrant arteries may be affected with aneurysmal lesions that are rare but potentially fatal [...] Read more.
Background: Anatomical variations in visceral arteries are not so uncommon (up to 20% of cases in general population), with splenic and hepatic artery anomalies being the most frequently reported. Aberrant arteries may be affected with aneurysmal lesions that are rare but potentially fatal conditions. In their treatment, a comprehensive understanding and knowledge of the underlining anatomical variation are pivotal to prevent potential ischemic complications for the end organ. Methods: A comprehensive literature search on the PubMed, Cochrane and Scopus databases was done using the terms: “anomalous visceral artery aneurysm”, “Aberrant visceral arteries”, and “anomalous origin visceral vessels”. Eligible studies published from inception to 30 June 2024 were identified. Only those that had included the adopted treatment strategies (open, endovascular or hybrid repair) and the related outcomes (mortality, bleeding, end-organ ischemia, lesions of the surrounding organ, need for reintervention) were analyzed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of each approach. A narrative analysis of the indications informing the selection of each interventional treatment, based on individual procedural risks, was also presented. Results: A total of 30 publications describing 36 patients (mean age 48.9 ± 12.8 years, range 22–73 years) with aneurysms involving aberrant visceral arteries were included. Most patients were female (25/36, 69.4%). True aneurysms predominated (with a mean size of 30.5 ± 11.5 mm, range 6–60 mm), being reported in 33/36 (91.7%) patients. Most lesions involved a splenic artery arising from the superior mesenteric artery (27/36, 75.0%). Overall, 26/36 (72.2%) patients were symptomatic upon presentation, most commonly with abdominal or epigastric pain, often associated with nausea or vomiting, back pain or shortness of breath. All patients underwent preoperative Computed angiotomography or subtraction angiography to define the operative strategy. Most cases were managed electively (31/36, 86.1%), but 11.1% (4/36) of cases required urgent intervention (in one case the urgency status was not specified). Overall, 19/36 (52.8%) patients underwent purely endovascular repair, 15/36 (41.7%) were treated with open surgery, and 2/36 (5.6%) had hybrid procedures combining endovascular coiling with laparoscopic splenic artery ligation. Indication for treatment was based on vessel tortuosity, landing zones, and the presence of side branches supplying end organs. Early outcomes were favorable regardless of treatment strategies. A single organ-related complication was reported (1/36, 2.8%) following open/endovascular repair, consisting of mild pancreatitis, which resolved with conservative management. No perioperative or aneurysm-related deaths were reported in any of the included cases. No recurrent aneurysms or late aneurysm-related complications were described during the reported follow-up intervals (mean ≈ 10.5 months, range 1.5–42 months). Conclusions: Aneurysms arising from aberrant visceral arteries present unique challenges because their origin, course, and collateral networks deviate from standard anatomy. Patient selection and detailed anatomic mapping preoperatively are decisive as inadequate imaging or failure to recognize an aberrant origin can lead to the incomplete exclusion or inadvertent sacrifice of critical branches. Understanding the anatomy of visceral arteries and their variations is paramount in clinical practice, particularly when planning interventions for minimizing procedural risks, optimizing outcomes, and preventing potential complications. Contemporary practice favors endovascular repair due to lower perioperative morbidity, but success depends on vessel tortuosity, landing zones, and the presence of important side branches that supply end organs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Complications in Vascular Surgery: Current Updates and Perspectives)
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25 pages, 18687 KB  
Article
Fine 3D Seismic Processing and Quantitative Interpretation of Tight Sandstone Gas Reservoirs—A Case Study of the Shaximiao Formation in the Yingshan Area, Sichuan Basin
by Hongxue Li, Yankai Wang, Mingju Xie and Shoubin Wen
Processes 2026, 14(3), 506; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14030506 - 1 Feb 2026
Viewed by 416
Abstract
Targeting the thinly bedded and strongly heterogeneous tight sandstone gas reservoirs of the Shaximiao Formation in the Yingshan area of the Sichuan Basin, this study establishes an integrated workflow that combines high-fidelity 3D seismic processing with quantitative interpretation to address key challenges such [...] Read more.
Targeting the thinly bedded and strongly heterogeneous tight sandstone gas reservoirs of the Shaximiao Formation in the Yingshan area of the Sichuan Basin, this study establishes an integrated workflow that combines high-fidelity 3D seismic processing with quantitative interpretation to address key challenges such as insufficient resolution of conventional seismic data under complex near-surface conditions and difficulty in depicting sand-body geometries. On the processing side, a 2D-3D integrated amplitude-preserving high-resolution strategy is applied. In contrast to conventional workflows that treat 2D and 3D datasets independently and often sacrifice true-amplitude characteristics during static correction and noise suppression, the proposed approach unifies first-break picking and static-correction parameters across 2D and 3D data while preserving relative amplitude fidelity. Techniques such as true-surface velocity modeling, coherent-noise suppression, and wavelet compression are introduced. As a result, the effective frequency bandwidth of the newly processed data is broadened by approximately 10–16 Hz relative to the legacy dataset, and the imaging of small faults and narrow river-channel boundaries is significantly enhanced. On the interpretation side, ten sublayers within the first member of the Shaximiao Formation are correlated with high precision, yielding the identification of 41 fourth-order local structural units and 122 stratigraphic traps. Through seismic forward modeling and attribute optimization, a set of sensitive attributes suitable for thin-sandstone detection is established. These attributes enable fine-scale characterization of sand-body distributions within the shallow-water delta system, where fluvial control is pronounced, leading to the identification of 364 multi-phase superimposed channels. Based on attribute fusion, rock-physics-constrained inversion, and integrated hydrocarbon-indicator analysis, 147 favorable “sweet spots” are predicted, and six well locations are proposed. The study builds a reservoir-forming model of “deep hydrocarbon generation–upward migration, fault-controlled charging, structural trapping, and microfacies-controlled enrichment,” achieving high-fidelity imaging and quantitative prediction of tight sandstone reservoirs in the Shaximiao Formation. The results provide robust technical support for favorable-zone evaluation and subsequent exploration deployment in the Yingshan area. Full article
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22 pages, 862 KB  
Article
Energy Justice, Critical Minerals, and the Geopolitical Metabolism of the Global Energy Transition: Insights from Copper Extraction in Chile and Peru
by Axel Bastián Poque González and Yunesky Masip Macia
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 1032; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18021032 - 20 Jan 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1099
Abstract
The global energy transition (ET) is widely portrayed as a technological shift toward low-carbon systems; however, it also entails profound geopolitical and socio-environmental transformations. While energy justice (EJ) has become a key framework for assessing fairness in energy systems, it seldom incorporates the [...] Read more.
The global energy transition (ET) is widely portrayed as a technological shift toward low-carbon systems; however, it also entails profound geopolitical and socio-environmental transformations. While energy justice (EJ) has become a key framework for assessing fairness in energy systems, it seldom incorporates the geopolitical restructuring of material, energy, and economic flows that underpin contemporary transitions. This article develops a geopolitically informed approach to EJ, trying to capture how the new flows of energy, matter, and power shape—and are shaped by—enduring centre–periphery inequalities. Using a guided literature synthesis that combines EJ, political ecology, decolonial critiques, and green extractivism, the study enhances classical EJ tenets by incorporating transboundary flows, ecological unequal exchange, ontological plurality, and local self-determination. An illustrative application to copper extraction in Chile and Peru demonstrates how critical-mineral supply chains reproduce new sacrifice zones within emerging geopolitical configurations. By connecting local socio-environmental conflicts to global energy dynamics, the framework advances a more comprehensive, multidimensional approach to justice in the ET. The findings offer conceptual and practical insights for designing more equitable and geopolitically aware sustainability policies. Full article
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21 pages, 3398 KB  
Article
The Effects of Maize–Soybean and Maize–Peanut Intercropping on the Spatiotemporal Distribution of Soil Nutrients and Crop Growth
by Wenwen Zhang, Yitong Zhao, Guoyu Li, Lei Shen, Wenwen Wei, Zhe Li, Tayir Tuerti and Wei Zhang
Agronomy 2025, 15(11), 2527; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15112527 - 30 Oct 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1779
Abstract
The spatiotemporal dynamics of soil nutrients in the crop row zone are critical determinants of crop yield, necessitating precision fertilization for optimal plant growth. However, previous studies have predominantly focused on plant-available nutrient status at the scale of entire cropping systems, yet a [...] Read more.
The spatiotemporal dynamics of soil nutrients in the crop row zone are critical determinants of crop yield, necessitating precision fertilization for optimal plant growth. However, previous studies have predominantly focused on plant-available nutrient status at the scale of entire cropping systems, yet a granular understanding of their distribution patterns across precise temporal and spatial dimensions remains limited. Therefore, this study investigated maize–legume intercropping systems to quantify the dynamics of soil alkaline-hydrolyzable nitrogen (AN), available phosphorus (AP), and available potassium (AK) across distinct growth stages, soil depths, and row positions. The experiment comprised five treatments: maize–soybean intercropping, maize–peanut intercropping, and monocultures of maize, soybean, and peanut. Throughout the two-year study, maize–soybean intercropping significantly enhanced the plant height of both maize and soybean relative to their respective monocultures (p < 0.05). In contrast, within the maize–peanut system, intercropping significantly promoted peanut plant height but suppressed stem diameter in both species (p < 0.05); these effects were consistent across both study years. Both systems exhibited a “benefit-sacrifice” pattern, where dry matter was preferentially allocated to maize, thereby increasing total system productivity despite suppressing legume growth. Furthermore, during the mid-to-late growth stages, intercropped maize showed an enhanced capacity for nitrogen uptake from deeper soil layers. In contrast, the alkaline-hydrolyzable nitrogen content in intercropped soybean and peanut remained lower than in their respective monocultures throughout the growth period, with reductions ranging from 8.49% to 34.79%. Intercropping significantly increased the soil available phosphorus content in the root zones of maize, soybean, and peanut compared to their respective monocultures. The available phosphorus content in the 0–20 cm soil layer was consistently higher than in monoculture systems, with a maximum increase of 41.70%. Moreover, intercropping effectively mitigated soil potassium depletion, resulting in a smaller decline in available potassium. This effect was most pronounced in the maize–peanut intercropping pattern within the 20–40 cm soil layer. The distribution of soil available nutrients (N, P, K) was also influenced by drip tape placement. The levels of these nutrients for soybean and peanut were higher at 50 cm from the drip tape than at 30 cm, while for maize, levels were higher at 80 cm than at 40 cm. Intercropping increased the thousand-kernel weight of maize and soybean but decreased that of peanut. Overall, the strategic row configuration optimized the yield performance of both intercropping systems, resulting in land equivalent ratios greater than 1, which indicates distinct yield advantages for both intercropping patterns. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Innovative Cropping Systems)
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9 pages, 2730 KB  
Article
Vertebral Artery Sacrifice After Balloon Test Occlusion in Endovascular Repair of Subclavian Artery Aneurysm
by Carlo Coscarella, Rocco Giudice, Marta Minucci, Adelaide Borlizzi, Federico Francisco Pennetta, Bernardo Orellana Davila and Ciro Ferrer
J. Vasc. Dis. 2025, 4(3), 35; https://doi.org/10.3390/jvd4030035 - 11 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1437
Abstract
Introduction: Isolated true subclavian artery aneurysm (SAA) is a rare form of peripheral arterial aneurysm that poses significant anatomical challenges to endovascular repair, especially in cases requiring planned vertebral artery (VA) sacrifice. The Balloon Occlusion Test (BOT) is a critical preoperative tool for [...] Read more.
Introduction: Isolated true subclavian artery aneurysm (SAA) is a rare form of peripheral arterial aneurysm that poses significant anatomical challenges to endovascular repair, especially in cases requiring planned vertebral artery (VA) sacrifice. The Balloon Occlusion Test (BOT) is a critical preoperative tool for evaluating collateral circulation before VA embolization. Case Report: A 74-year-old male was admitted with a pulsatile mass in the left supraclavicular fossa, and a 65 mm aneurysm of the intrathoracic segment of the left subclavian artery (LSA) involving critical arterial branches was diagnosed by computed tomography angiography. Due to his comorbidities, the patient was judged unfit for an open surgical repair of the aneurysm, and a two-stage endovascular subclavian aneurysm repair (EVSAR) was planned. The first step included embolization of the internal mammary artery and thyrocervical trunk, followed by BOT of the left VA, which confirmed an adequate perfusion of the posterior cerebral and cerebellar circulation that allowed safe VA embolization. The second step included zone 2 thoracic endograft placement (TEVAR) with LSA coverage and vascular plug occlusion of the proximal segment of the LSA and the axillary artery. Postoperative monitoring revealed no neurological deficit, and the patient was discharged home without complications. Follow-up imaging up to 24 months confirmed complete aneurysm exclusion and significant sac shrinkage. Conclusions: EVSAR with thoracic endograft and VA sacrifice, preceded by BOT, may be a safe and effective minimally invasive approach for the treatment of intrathoracic SAA. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Peripheral Vascular Diseases)
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16 pages, 5185 KB  
Article
Political Ecology as an Analytical Tool in the Mezquital Valley, Mexico: A Permanent Struggle
by Jesús Guerrero Morales, Brisa Violeta Carrasco Gallegos, Raquel Hinojosa Reyes, Juan Campos Alanis and Edel Cadena Vargas
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(9), 509; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14090509 - 24 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1870 | Correction
Abstract
Solid waste for incineration and wastewater from the country’s largest city, Mexico City (CDMX), is transported to the southern region of Valle del Mezquital (MV). This area also hosts an oil refinery, a thermoelectric plant (PEMEX-CFE), cement factories, industrial corridors, and mining operations, [...] Read more.
Solid waste for incineration and wastewater from the country’s largest city, Mexico City (CDMX), is transported to the southern region of Valle del Mezquital (MV). This area also hosts an oil refinery, a thermoelectric plant (PEMEX-CFE), cement factories, industrial corridors, and mining operations, all of which harm environmental and public health. From a Political Ecology (PE) perspective, we examine the mechanisms of accumulation, emphasizing the allocation of property titles and the extraction of rent as an environmental reservoir. We also explore the power of socio-environmental movements to provide a comprehensive understanding of environmental conflict. Based on economic power structures, we identify a geopolitical configuration that deepens the spatial divisions between labor in the MV and consumption in CDMX, exacerbating health disparities. We conclude that an unequal geography has been built that has produced capitalist and rentier landowners who are exempt from the externalities that have produced a sacrifice zone. The Mexican State is a key stakeholder, collaborating with the industrial elite in both legal and illegal spheres. Within this sacrifice zone, the inhabitants of the MV have resisted pollution and industrial accidents for over 50 years. Despite publicizing their struggle internationally and collaborating with academics, members of the movement have been assassinated. Full article
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23 pages, 22378 KB  
Article
Counter-Cartographies of Extraction: Mapping Socio-Environmental Changes Through Hybrid Geographic Information Technologies
by Mitesh Dixit, Nataša Danilović Hristić and Nebojša Stefanović
Land 2025, 14(8), 1576; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081576 - 1 Aug 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2218
Abstract
This paper examines Krivelj, a copper mining village in Serbia, as a critical yet overlooked node within global extractive networks. Despite supplying copper essential for renewable energy and sustainable architecture, Krivelj experiences severe ecological disruption, forced relocations, and socio-spatial destabilization, becoming a “sacrifice [...] Read more.
This paper examines Krivelj, a copper mining village in Serbia, as a critical yet overlooked node within global extractive networks. Despite supplying copper essential for renewable energy and sustainable architecture, Krivelj experiences severe ecological disruption, forced relocations, and socio-spatial destabilization, becoming a “sacrifice zone”—an area deliberately subjected to harm for broader economic interests. Employing a hybrid methodology that combines ethnographic fieldwork with Geographic Information Systems (GISs), this study spatializes narratives of extractive violence collected from residents through walking interviews, field sketches, and annotated aerial imagery. By integrating satellite data, legal documents, environmental sensors, and lived testimonies, it uncovers the concept of “slow violence,” where incremental harm occurs through bureaucratic neglect, ambient pollution, and legal ambiguity. Critiquing the abstraction of Planetary Urbanization theory, this research employs countertopography and forensic spatial analysis to propose a counter-cartographic framework that integrates geospatial analysis with local narratives. It demonstrates how global mining finance manifests locally through tangible experiences, such as respiratory illnesses and disrupted community relationships, emphasizing the potential of counter-cartography as a tool for visualizing and contesting systemic injustice. Full article
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26 pages, 330 KB  
Article
Religions in Extractive Zones: Methods, Imaginaries, Solidarities
by Terra Schwerin Rowe, Christiana Zenner and Lisa H. Sideris
Religions 2025, 16(7), 820; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070820 - 23 Jun 2025
Viewed by 2889
Abstract
This essay serves as an expansive, conceptual anchor and scholarly argument that demonstrates the modality of “reflexive extractivist” religious studies and also orients the Special Issue on Religion in Extractive Zones. We demonstrate that critical religious and theological scholarship have existing tools and [...] Read more.
This essay serves as an expansive, conceptual anchor and scholarly argument that demonstrates the modality of “reflexive extractivist” religious studies and also orients the Special Issue on Religion in Extractive Zones. We demonstrate that critical religious and theological scholarship have existing tools and methods for deepening the study of extraction in the environmental humanities and related discourses. We make two interconnected arguments: that religion has been and continues to be produced out of extractive zones in the conflicts, negotiations, and strategic alliances of contact zones and that the complex production of sacred and secular in these zones can be fruitfully analyzed as imaginaries and counter-imaginaries of extraction. We present these arguments through a dialogical and critically integrative methodology, in which arguments from theorists across several disciplines are put into conversation and from which our insights emerge. This methodology leads to a final section of the essay that sets a framework for, and invites further dialogical and integrative scholarship on, the practical ethics of non- or counter-extractive academic research, scholarship, and publishing. Offering theoretical, methodological, and practical suggestions, we call for a turn toward reflexive extractivist religious studies, articulate the specific conceptual and methodological approaches linking religion and extraction, and thus set the framework and tone for the Special Issue. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion in Extractive Zones)
21 pages, 285 KB  
Article
Chartism’s Critical Carbon Theology: What Fossil Power’s Nineteenth-Century Demonizers Contribute to the Ethics of Energy Justice Today
by Ryan Juskus
Religions 2024, 15(11), 1293; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15111293 - 23 Oct 2024
Viewed by 2102
Abstract
Recent scholarship on religion and energy highlights the religious attachments some groups of people form with fossil fuels that have served to facilitate their extraction and use in building socially and economically stratified worlds. This scholarship foregrounds the business owners, managers, scientists, inventors, [...] Read more.
Recent scholarship on religion and energy highlights the religious attachments some groups of people form with fossil fuels that have served to facilitate their extraction and use in building socially and economically stratified worlds. This scholarship foregrounds the business owners, managers, scientists, inventors, industrial spokespersons, and other panegyrists of the beneficent, civilizing power of coal and oil. However, little research to date has examined the religious attachments formed with fossil fuels by those who mined them, labored with machines powered by them, and lived in places that were diminished to extract, burn, and waste them. This article builds on the work of Andreas Malm and Terra Schwerin Rowe to examine these “critical carbon theologies”. It focuses in particular on the theological themes in popular literature produced by the nineteenth-century British Chartist movement—the first great social movement led by those who experienced in their bodies, communities, and environments the traumas that accompanied the introduction of fossil fuels as a motive power. These Chartist activist-theologians condemned coal power as a demonic force in history and envisioned a way to exorcize an industrializing society of its demons. This article uncovers and evaluates the largely overlooked theological dimensions of this movement and applies them toward a consideration of the ethics of energy transition today. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion in Extractive Zones)
15 pages, 3812 KB  
Article
The Groundwater Management in the Mexico Megacity Peri-Urban Interface
by Karen Ivon Ríos-Sánchez, Silvia Chamizo-Checa, Eric Galindo-Castillo, Otilio Arturo Acevedo-Sandoval, César Abelardo González-Ramírez, María de la Luz Hernández-Flores and Elena María Otazo-Sánchez
Sustainability 2024, 16(11), 4801; https://doi.org/10.3390/su16114801 - 5 Jun 2024
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 5567
Abstract
Megacities boost peri-urban socioeconomic development but fulfill their high natural resource demands by overexploitation, yielding irreversible environmental damage in surroundings that turn into sacrifice zones. This study reports the effects on the Cuautitlán-Pachuca Valley, the Mexico City main expansion zone at the northeast [...] Read more.
Megacities boost peri-urban socioeconomic development but fulfill their high natural resource demands by overexploitation, yielding irreversible environmental damage in surroundings that turn into sacrifice zones. This study reports the effects on the Cuautitlán-Pachuca Valley, the Mexico City main expansion zone at the northeast of the metropolitan area on the Central Mexico plateau, the trend scenarios from 2020 to 2050, and the actions to mitigate the growing water demand that will worsen its aquifer overexploitation. We designed a conceptual archetype to apply the Water Evaluation and Planning System (W.E.A.P.) mathematical model calibrated with 2013–2014 data to calculate groundwater volume demand in future scenarios. The demand output for the international airport and agriculture was less than 5%. The local climate change effect up to 2050 will slightly reduce the infiltration. The most crucial water demand increase (195% in 2050) is due to the population and industrial growth of the Mexico City northern municipalities (89% of the total groundwater extraction volume), and the aquifer will have a notable −2192.3 hm3 accumulated deficit in 2050, while urban sprawl will decrease water infiltration by 2.3%. Mitigation scenarios such as rainwater harvesting may reduce the urban water supply only by 9%, and a leak cutback will do so by 24%, which is still insufficient to achieve sustainable water management in the future. These outcomes emphasize the need to consider other actions, such as importing water from near aquifers and treating wastewater reuse to meet the future water demand. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Water Management)
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12 pages, 2743 KB  
Article
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery in the Wake of the Eid al-Adha: A Single-Center, Five-Year Investigation
by Mehmet Tapan, Burak Yaşar, Hasan Murat Ergani and Süleyman Can Ceylan
J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13(9), 2704; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13092704 - 4 May 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1745
Abstract
(1) Background: The Festival of Sacrifice, commonly known as Eid al-Adha, has a profound religious and cultural impact on nations with a Muslim majority. This festival is celebrated every year in Muslim countries; however, it is a time in which patients present to [...] Read more.
(1) Background: The Festival of Sacrifice, commonly known as Eid al-Adha, has a profound religious and cultural impact on nations with a Muslim majority. This festival is celebrated every year in Muslim countries; however, it is a time in which patients present to the emergency department with serious injuries. In our study, we examined current injuries occurring during Eid al-Adha in one of the largest hospitals in Türkiye, providing the largest patient population to date. This included mapping tendon and maxillofacial injuries, a first in the literature. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest case series of injuries sustained during Eid al-Adha. The significance of this study lies in its potential to significantly benefit patients and healthcare systems by providing reference data. (2) Methods: Patients admitted to Ankara City Hospital during Eid al-Adha between 2019 and 2023 were examined. The demographic characteristics, injury patterns, and injury sites of patients admitted on the four days of Eid al-Adha were collected and analyzed. Maxillofacial traumas during the festival were analyzed. Tendon injuries on the left hand, which is the most commonly injured body part in the literature, were mapped into a figure. To compare the change in the number of patients, a comparison was made with the number of patients in our hospital for four consecutive days 2 weeks before Eid. Statistical analysis was performed using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows. (3) Results: A total of 610 patients, including 101 female and 509 male patients, were included in this study. A statistically significant increase (p < 0.001 for all years) in hospital admission due to injury was observed. Individuals between the ages of 30 and 40 years were the most frequently admitted patients (n = 182, 29.8%). Knife injuries were significantly more common in all patients (p < 0.001). When the total number of patients was evaluated in terms of injured areas where patients present to the emergency department, left-hand injuries were found to be significantly more common than injuries in other areas (p < 0.001 for all). The extensor pollicus longus tendon was the most commonly injured tendon among all extensor and flexor tendon injuries (n = 104). The most commonly injured tendon was the flexor tendon in zone 2 of the first finger (n = 45). This study showed that injuries to the extensor tendon in zone 1 of the fifth finger, the flexor tendon in zone 4 of the first finger, and the flexor tendon in zone 1 of the fifth finger were never seen. Twenty-five patients with maxillofacial injuries were admitted to the hospital. Orbital floor fractures were the most common type of maxillofacial injury. The anesthesia technique we preferred for all patients was local anesthesia (n = 267). Wide-awake local anesthesia no tourniquet (WALANT) was the second most preferred anesthetic technique. The number of patients who were selected in a random 4-day period for each year were compared with the number of patients who came during Eid al-Adha. The Mann–Whitney U tests revealed a significant increase in injuries on the first day of Eid al-Adha compared to non-festival days (p < 0.001). However, no significant differences were observed on the subsequent days or in the overall injury counts during the festival period (p = 0.841 for day 2, p = 0.151 for day 3, p = 0.310 for day 4). (4) Conclusions: According to this study, which is the largest known case series in the literature, the number of patients admitted to the hospital increased annually. In our study, we observed a significant increase in injuries only on the first day of Eid al-Adha compared to a randomly selected 4-day period of the same year. Left-hand extensor tendon injuries from a knife were the most common injuries in middle-aged men. The extensor pollicis longus tendon was the most commonly injured extensor tendon, with zones 3 and 4 being the most commonly affected. The flexor pollicis longus tendon was the most commonly injured flexor tendon in zone 2. During this period, patients may not only need hand surgery but also maxillofacial plastic surgery. We recommend, in addition to the indications I,n the literature that during Eid al-Adha, the WALANT technique should be widely adopted in patients where local anesthesia will be insufficient. We also recommend utilizing a diagram to manage the patient load during Eid al-Adha and prevent overburdening the healthcare system. Full article
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20 pages, 7837 KB  
Article
Distinct Impact of Drought on Radial Growth at Different Heights and Parts of Populus euphratica in the Oasis at the Hinterland of the Taklimakan Desert
by Anwar Abdureyim, Yue Dai, Qingdong Shi, Feng Zhang, Yanbo Wan, Haobo Shi and Lei Peng
Forests 2023, 14(12), 2338; https://doi.org/10.3390/f14122338 - 29 Nov 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2066
Abstract
Warming and persistent droughts may exacerbate drought stress in water-scarce areas, thereby negatively affecting tree growth. When riparian plants in arid regions experience severe drought stress, they sacrifice non-dominant branches with less competitive sap flow to improve the sap flow of dominant branches [...] Read more.
Warming and persistent droughts may exacerbate drought stress in water-scarce areas, thereby negatively affecting tree growth. When riparian plants in arid regions experience severe drought stress, they sacrifice non-dominant branches with less competitive sap flow to improve the sap flow of dominant branches and thus ensure strong plant growth. Populus euphratica is one of the most dominant tree species in the riparian forest ecosystems of inland river basins in arid zones and is a reliable indicator of ecological change because of its diversity in growth and environment. To understand the adaptability of P. euphratica to the environment, the relationship between radial growth and meteorological factors, the growth decline and resistance of different heights and components of P. euphratica, as well as the resilience and resilience after recession were investigated. The results indicated that tree-ring width decreased gradually with increasing height and branching class of P. euphratica. Growth decreased at the bottom of the stem earlier than at the middle and top. Temperature, precipitation, and the Palmer drought index contributed to the growth at the bottom of P. euphratica, while precipitation contributed to growth at the top. The decline in the P. euphratica growth change rate was highly synchronized across heights and parts, with relatively high declines at the bottom and top. There were no significant differences in the recovery values for different heights and parts of P. euphratica, but the resistance, resilience, and relative resilience for the bottom and top were significantly lower than those for the other components, indicating vulnerability in the bottom and top of P. euphratica to drought. The relative resilience gradually decreased with the increase in branching class, and that of the secondary lateral branches at different heights was the lowest. In conclusion, the sensitivity of the top and lateral branches of P. euphratica to drought would cause the phenomenon of “breaking its arm” under drought disturbance in the future. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Response of Tree Rings to Climate Change and Climate Extremes)
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13 pages, 2561 KB  
Article
Corrosion Resistance and Titanium Ion Release of Hybrid Dental Implants
by Daniel Robles, Aritza Brizuela, Manuel Fernández-Domínguez and Javier Gil
Materials 2023, 16(10), 3650; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16103650 - 10 May 2023
Cited by 22 | Viewed by 3580
Abstract
One of the strategies for the fight against peri-implantitis is the fabrication of titanium dental implants with the part close to the neck without roughness. It is well known that roughness favors osseointegration but hinders the formation of biofilm. Implants with this type [...] Read more.
One of the strategies for the fight against peri-implantitis is the fabrication of titanium dental implants with the part close to the neck without roughness. It is well known that roughness favors osseointegration but hinders the formation of biofilm. Implants with this type of structure are called hybrid dental implants, which sacrifice better coronal osseointegration for a smooth surface that hinders bacterial colonization. In this contribution, we have studied the corrosion resistance and the release of titanium ions to the medium of smooth (L), hybrid (H), and rough (R) dental implants. All implants were identical in design. Roughness was determined with an optical interferometer and residual stresses were determined for each surface by X-ray diffraction using the Bragg–Bentano technique. Corrosion studies were carried out with a Voltalab PGZ301 potentiostat, using Hank’s solution as an electrolyte at a temperature of 37 °C. Open-circuit potentials (Eocp), corrosion potential (Ecorr), and current density (icorr) were determined. Implant surfaces were observed by JEOL 5410 scanning electron microscopy. Finally, for each of the different dental implants, the release of ions into Hank’s solution at 37 °C at 1, 7, 14, and 30 days of immersion was determined by ICP-MS. The results, as expected, show a higher roughness of R with respect to L and compressive residual stresses of −201.2 MPa and −20.2 MPa, respectively. These differences in residual stresses create a potential difference in the H implant corresponding to Eocp of −186.4 mV higher than for the L and R of −200.9 and −192.2 mV, respectively. The corrosion potentials and current intensity are also higher for the H implants (−223 mV and 0.069 μA/mm2) with respect to the L (−280 mV and 0.014 μA/mm2 and R (−273 mV and 0.019 μA/mm2). Scanning electron microscopy revealed pitting in the interface zone of the H implants and no pitting in the L and R dental implants. The titanium ion release values to the medium are higher in the R implants due to their higher specific surface area compared to the H and L implants. The maximum values obtained are low, not exceeding 6 ppb in 30 days. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biomaterials)
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16 pages, 4932 KB  
Article
Evaluation of Atmospheric Environmental Regulations: The Case of Thermoelectric Power Plants
by Mateo Concha and Gonzalo A. Ruz
Atmosphere 2023, 14(2), 358; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos14020358 - 11 Feb 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2764
Abstract
In Chile, the concept of sacrifice zones corresponds to those land surfaces in which industrial development was prioritized over the environmental impact that it caused. A high number of industries that emit pollutants into the environment are concentrated in these zones. This paper [...] Read more.
In Chile, the concept of sacrifice zones corresponds to those land surfaces in which industrial development was prioritized over the environmental impact that it caused. A high number of industries that emit pollutants into the environment are concentrated in these zones. This paper studies the atmospheric component of the Environmental Impact Declaration and Assessment’s (EID and EIA, respectively) environmental assessment instruments of the thermoelectric power plants in northern Chile, based on their consistency with current environmental quality regulations. We specify concepts on air quality, atmospheric emission regulations, and the critical parameters and factors to be considered when carrying out an environmental impact assessment. Finally, we end by presenting possible alternatives to replace the current methodologies and criteria for atmospheric regulation in areas identified as saturated or of environmental sacrifice, with an emphasis on both population health and an environmental approach. Full article
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