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PURPOSEII. BACKGROUND
FINDINGS
RECOMMENDATIONS
HISTORY OF ATSDR ACTIVITIESIII. EXPOSURE PATHWAY EVALUATION
CURRENT ATSDR ACTIVITIES
IDENTIFICATION OF PATHWAYS OF EXPOSUREIV. DISCUSSION
SOURCES AND EXPOSURE PATHWAYS AT TAR CREEK SUPERFUND SITE
MAJOR COMPLETED EXPOSURE PATHWAYS
Residential Area SoilOTHER EXPOSURE PATHWAYS
Mine Tailings
Lead-Based Paint
Ingestion of Homegrown ProducePHYSICAL HAZARDS
Ingestion of Tap Water
Airborne Dust
Use of Biota by Tar Creek Site Area Tribal Populations
BLOOD LEAD EVALUATIONV. CONCLUSIONS
Datasets ReviewedPERCENTAGE OF ELEVATED BLLS AND GEOMETRIC MEAN OF BLLS
PICHER/CARDIN IN COMPARISON WITH THE TAR CREEK SUPERFUND SITE AS A WHOLE
CHARACTERISTICS OF CHILDREN WITH ELEVATED BLLS
DATA LIMITATIONS
INTERVENTIONS
TABLE 1 - Major Lead Exposure Pathways at the Tar Creek Superfund SiteVIII. FIGURES
TABLE 2 - Other Lead Exposure Pathways at the Tar Creek Superfund Site
TABLE 3 - Demographics in Tar Creek Superfund Site Area
TABLE 4 - Characteristics of Blood Lead Testing Data Among Children Aged 1-5 Years Living Within the Tar Creek Superfund Site - Entire Site
TABLE 5 - Characteristics of Blood Lead Testing Data Among Children Aged 1-5 Years Living Within the Tar Creek Superfund Site - Picher and Cardin Only
TABLE 6 - Existing Health Study Information
TABLE 7 - Children Aged 1-5 Years Living in the Tar Creek Superfund Site with Known Elevated BLLS in 2003, Residential Assessment Lead Exposure Status