Literature DB >> 22960402

Waste-water impacts on groundwater: Cl/Br ratios and implications for arsenic pollution of groundwater in the Bengal Basin and Red River Basin, Vietnam.

J M McArthur1, P K Sikdar, M A Hoque, U Ghosal.   

Abstract

Across West Bengal and Bangladesh, concentrations of Cl in much groundwater exceed the natural, upper limit of 10 mg/L. The Cl/Br mass ratios in groundwaters range up to 2500 and scatter along mixing lines between waste-water and dilute groundwater, with many falling near the mean end-member value for waste-water of 1561 at 126 mg/L Cl. Values of Cl/Br exceed the seawater ratio of 288 in uncommon NO(3)-bearing groundwaters, and in those containing measurable amounts of salt-corrected SO(4) (SO(4) corrected for marine salt). The data show that shallow groundwater tapped by tube-wells in the Bengal Basin has been widely contaminated by waste-water derived from pit latrines, septic tanks, and other methods of sanitary disposal, although reducing conditions in the aquifers have removed most evidence of NO(3) additions from these sources, and much evidence of their additions of SO(4). In groundwaters from wells in palaeo-channel settings, end-member modelling shows that >25% of wells yield water that comprises ≥10% of waste-water. In palaeo-interfluvial settings, only wells at the margins of the palaeo-interfluvial sequence contain detectable waste water. Settings are identifiable by well-colour survey, owner information, water composition, and drilling. Values of Cl/Br and faecal coliform counts are both inversely related to concentrations of pollutant As in groundwater, suggesting that waste-water contributions to groundwater in the near-field of septic-tanks and pit-latrines (within 30 m) suppress the mechanism of As-pollution and lessen the prevalence and severity of As pollution. In the far-field of such sources, organic matter in waste-water may increase groundwater pollution by As.
Copyright © 2012. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22960402     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.07.068

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  13 in total

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2.  Seasonal and spatial variation of arsenic in groundwater in a rhyolithic volcanic area of Lesvos Island, Greece.

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4.  Human and livestock waste as a reduced carbon source contributing to the release of arsenic to shallow Bangladesh groundwater.

Authors:  K J Whaley-Martin; B J Mailloux; A van Geen; B C Bostick; K M Ahmed; I Choudhury; G F Slater
Journal:  Sci Total Environ       Date:  2017-04-04       Impact factor: 7.963

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6.  Reverse ion exchange as a major process controlling the groundwater chemistry in an arid environment: a case study from northwestern Saudi Arabia.

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7.  Stimulation of Microbially Mediated Arsenic Release in Bangladesh Aquifers by Young Carbon Indicated by Radiocarbon Analysis of Sedimentary Bacterial Lipids.

Authors:  K J Whaley-Martin; B J Mailloux; A van Geen; B C Bostick; R F Silvern; C Kim; K M Ahmed; I Choudhury; G F Slater
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8.  Quantifying Riverine Recharge Impacts on Redox Conditions and Arsenic Release in Groundwater Aquifers Along the Red River, Vietnam.

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9.  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

10.  Evaluation of factors influencing the groundwater chemistry in a small tropical island of Malaysia.

Authors:  Nura Umar Kura; Mohammad Firuz Ramli; Wan Nur Azmin Sulaiman; Shaharin Ibrahim; Ahmad Zaharin Aris; Adamu Mustapha
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