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Library Proposal of an Initial Environmental Management and Land Use for Critical Cemeteries in Central Ecuador

Proposal of an Initial Environmental Management and Land Use for Critical Cemeteries in Central Ecuador

Proposal of an Initial Environmental Management and Land Use for Critical Cemeteries in Central Ecuador

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2021
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
LP-midp000825

Cemeteries are sites for the final disposal of human bodies that constitute a source of contamination of soil and water as a result of the cadaveric decomposition generated. The current research performed an initial study on the contamination of soil and water due to the influence of cemeteries and verified compliance with the legislation regulating land use and occupation of Central Ecuador (PUGS) with the aim of proposing an environmental and territorial solution to the problems generated by the mismanagement of cemeteries, through the physicochemical analysis of soil and water and studies of land use compatibility. The results indicate the tendency of contamination caused by the studied cemeteries, since the samples taken in both the rainy and dry season for the measurement of parameters BOD5, COD, DO, pH and electrical conductivity fail to meet the established requirements of the Ecuadorian and international environmental regulations. In addition, land use conflicts were encountered in the cemetery grounds. It is concluded that the existing cemeteries should be subjected to more detailed environmental analysis and subsequently should be treated as security landfills in the closure and post-closure stage. Also, it has been concluded that the cemeteries should not be located in urban or peri-urban areas.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Flores Gómez, GeomaraCrisanto-Perrazo, TaniaToulkeridis, TheofilosFierro-Naranjo, GretaGuevara-García, PaulinaMayorga-Llerena, EduardoVizuete-Freire, DiegoSalazar, EsthelaSinde-Gonzalez, Izar

Corporate Author(s)
Geographical focus