Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1187812 | Food Chemistry | 2007 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Trace metal content of nine fish species harvested from the Black and Aegean Seas were determined by microwave digestion and atomic absorption spectroscopy (MD–AAS). Verification of the MD–AAS method was demonstrated by analysis of standard reference material (NRCC-DORM-2 dogfish muscle). Trace metal content in fish samples were 0.73–1.83 μg/g for copper, 0.45–0.90 μg/g for cadmium, 0.33–0.93 μg/g for lead, 35.4–106 μg/g for zinc, 1.28–7.40 μg/g for manganese, 68.6–163 μg/g for iron, 0.95–1.98 μg/g for chromium, and 1.92–5.68 μg/g for nickel. The levels of lead and cadmium in fish samples were higher than the recommended legal limits for human consumption.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Ozgur Dogan Uluozlu, Mustafa Tuzen, Durali Mendil, Mustafa Soylak,