Literature DB >> 21268629

Palaeosol control on groundwater flow and pollutant distribution: the example of arsenic.

John M McArthur1, Bibhash Nath, Dhiraj M Banerjee, R Purohit, N Grassineau.   

Abstract

The consumption of groundwater polluted by arsenic (As) has a severe and adverse effect on human health, particularly where, as happens in parts of SE Asia, groundwater is supplied largely from fluvial/deltaic aquifers. The lateral distribution of the As-pollution in such aquifers is heterogeneous. The cause of the heterogeneity is obscure. The location and severity of the As-pollution is therefore difficult to predict, despite the importance of such predictions to the protection of consumer health, aquifer remediation, and aquifer development. To explain the heterogeneity, we mapped As-pollution in groundwater using 659 wells across 102 km(2) of West Bengal, and logged 43 boreholes, to reveal that the distribution of As-pollution is governed by subsurface sedimentology. Across 47 km(2) of contiguous palaeo-interfluve, we found that the shallow aquifer (<70 mbgl) is unpolluted by As (<10 μg/L) because it is capped by an impermeable palaeosol of red clay (the last glacial maximum palaeosol, or LGMP, of ref 1 ) at depths between 16 and 24 mbgl. The LGMP protects the aquifer from vertical recharge that might carry As-rich water or dissolved organic matter that might drive reduction of sedimentary iron oxides and so release As to groundwater. In 55 km(2) of flanking palaeo-channels, the palaeosol is absent, so invasion of the aquifer by As and dissolved organic matter can occur, so palaeo-channel groundwater is mostly polluted by As (>50 μg/L). The role of palaeosols and, in particular, the LGMP, has been overlooked as a control on groundwater flow and pollutant movement in deltaic and coastal aquifers worldwide. Models of pollutant infiltration in such environments must include the appreciation that, where the LGMP (or other palaeosols) are present, recharge moves downward in palaeo-channel regions that are separated by palaeo-interfluvial regions where vertical recharge to underlying aquifers cannot occur and where horizontal flow occurs above the LGMP and any aquifer it caps.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21268629     DOI: 10.1021/es1032376

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  4 in total

1.  Arsenic mobilization in the Brahmaputra plains of Assam: groundwater and sedimentary controls.

Authors:  Lalsangzela Sailo; Chandan Mahanta
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2014-07-01       Impact factor: 2.513

2.  Recharge of low-arsenic aquifers tapped by community wells in Araihazar, Bangladesh, inferred from environmental isotopes.

Authors:  I Mihajlov; M Stute; P Schlosser; B J Mailloux; Y Zheng; I Choudhury; K M Ahmed; A van Geen
Journal:  Water Resour Res       Date:  2016-05-01       Impact factor: 5.240

3.  Predicting the Distribution of Arsenic in Groundwater by a Geospatial Machine Learning Technique in the Two Most Affected Districts of Assam, India: The Public Health Implications.

Authors:  Bibhash Nath; Runti Chowdhury; Wenge Ni-Meister; Chandan Mahanta
Journal:  Geohealth       Date:  2022-03-01

4.  A generalized regression model of arsenic variations in the shallow groundwater of Bangladesh.

Authors:  Mohammad Shamsudduha; Richard G Taylor; Richard E Chandler
Journal:  Water Resour Res       Date:  2015-01-28       Impact factor: 5.240

  4 in total

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