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Chemical contamination of soils due to military activity has become an urgent global concern, particularly in conflict-affected regions such as Ukraine. This study presents a methodology for the rapid identification and assessment of contaminated agricultural land using an integrated approach that combines open-source intelligence, geographic information systems (GIS), and remote sensing. The authors focused on military debris as a primary vector of soil contamination (by Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, and Zn) and utilized publicly available digital resources to geolocate fragments of destroyed equipment across farmlands in Kharkiv Oblast. To compensate for the limited availability of high-resolution, time-specific satellite imagery, the study employed free datasets from the European Space Agency. The emergence of soil tracks and field roads was used as a proxy indicator of ground disturbance and potential chemical impact. These signals guided field sampling campaigns, during which soil samples were collected in proximity to identified debris and analyzed in laboratory conditions for chemical pollutants. Analytical studies revealed that heavy metals at the impact site exceed maximum permissible concentrations and exhibit an increasing trend, particularly for cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc, with exceedances reaching up to 62 times the regulatory limits. All findings were systematically documented using a custom-designed GIS database, allowing the classification of contamination severity and spatial distribution. The resulting maps aim to support local authorities and farmers in decision-making and prioritising remediation measures. This approach provides a replicable framework for post-conflict environmental assessment and contributes to strengthening soil resilience in war-affected agricultural zones. Fig. - Flowchart: Methodological steps from satellite data collection → debris classification → GIS analysis → field validation. Visual Elements: 1. Satellite Imagery from Open-source Intelligence and GIS: Depicting agricultural fields in Kharkiv Oblast with highlighted military debris locations. 2. Resulting Map: Overlay of geocoded debris points (tanks, IFVs, APCs, etc.) on a soil cover map. 3. Contamination Assessment: Color-coded areas showing varying levels of chemical impact (e.g., orange for high contamination near tanks, yellow for moderate). 4. Field sampling and Ground Disturbance Verification: Side-by-side images of satellite-detected debris and ground-truth photos (e.g., T-72B3 tank wreckage). • Satellite data used to detect soil contamination from military vehicle debris. • 3GIS mapping enables spatial analysis of chemical impact zones in Kharkiv region. • Field verification confirms accuracy of remote sensing and OSINT methodology. • Heavy metals exceed MPCs significantly near armored vehicle explosion sites. • Localized contamination on agricultural land quantified across five districts.
Solokha et al. (Thu,) studied this question.