{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Environmental protection measures mitigate Pb but not Cd accumulation in soils: Evidence from a 49-year soil chronosequence in an industrial and mining city in Southwest China. {Author}: Long Z;Wu Y;Zhu H;Bing H;Huang Y; {Journal}: J Hazard Mater {Volume}: 478 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Oct 5 {Factor}: 14.224 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.135441 {Abstract}: To address severe soil Pb and Cd contamination from anthropogenic activities, governments have implemented various environmental management measures. However, the extent to which these measures have constrained Pb and Cd accumulation in industrial and mining city soils remains unclear. Here, we investigated Pb and Cd accumulation patterns in soils of Panzhihua City, Southwest China, and determined their dominant anthropogenic drivers using Pb and Cd isotopes. Pb accumulation initially slowed and then increased, while Cd showed a continuous acceleration. Traffic and coal-burning power generation were the dominant anthropogenic forcings for Pb and Cd accumulation in the soils, respectively. Environmental protection measures, particularly the ban on leaded gasoline, significantly reduced Pb accumulation by decreasing traffic-related Pb contributions to soils from 1980 to 2008. However, environmental management measures could not practically mitigate Cd accumulation in the soils owing to the high Cd content in consumed coal, poor efficiency of air pollutant control measures, and steep rise in coal-burning power generation. This study thus indicates the criticality of controlling Cd emissions from thermal power generation. Additionally, the challenges faced by small industrial and mining cities during economic transformation and environmental policy implementation warrant more attention.