| Literature DB >> 12446905 |
Charles F Harvey1, Christopher H Swartz, A B M Badruzzaman, Nicole Keon-Blute, Winston Yu, M Ashraf Ali, Jenny Jay, Roger Beckie, Volker Niedan, Daniel Brabander, Peter M Oates, Khandaker N Ashfaque, Shafiqul Islam, Harold F Hemond, M Feroze Ahmed.
Abstract
High levels of arsenic in well water are causing widespread poisoning in Bangladesh. In a typical aquifer in southern Bangladesh, chemical data imply that arsenic mobilization is associated with recent inflow of carbon. High concentrations of radiocarbon-young methane indicate that young carbon has driven recent biogeochemical processes, and irrigation pumping is sufficient to have drawn water to the depth where dissolved arsenic is at a maximum. The results of field injection of molasses, nitrate, and low-arsenic water show that organic carbon or its degradation products may quickly mobilize arsenic, oxidants may lower arsenic concentrations, and sorption of arsenic is limited by saturation of aquifer materials.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12446905 DOI: 10.1126/science.1076978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728