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Flushing History as a Hydrogeological Control on the Regional Distribution of Arsenic in Shallow Groundwater of the Bengal Basin
Author(s) -
Alexander van Geen,
Yan Zheng,
S. L. Goodbred,
A. Horneman,
Z. Aziz,
Zhongqi Cheng,
M. Stute,
Brian J. Mailloux,
Beth Weinman,
M. A. Hoque,
Ashraf Ali Seddique,
Mohammed Hossain,
Sanaul Huq Chowdhury,
Kazi Matin Ahmed
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/es702316k
Subject(s) - aquifer , groundwater , groundwater recharge , hydrogeology , structural basin , bengal , hydrology (agriculture) , flushing , environmental science , geology , oceanography , geomorphology , medicine , geotechnical engineering , bay , endocrinology
Whereas serious health consequences of widespread consumption of groundwater elevated in As have been documented in several South Asian countries, the mechanisms responsible for As mobilization in reducing aquifers remain poorly understood. We document here a previously unrecognized and consistent relationship between dissolved As concentrations in reducing groundwater and the phosphate-mobilizable As content of aquifer sediment for a set of precisely depth-matched samples from across Bangladesh. The relationship holds across nearly 3 orders of magnitude in As concentrations and suggests that regional as well as local patterns of dissolved As in shallow groundwater are set by the solid phase according to a remarkably constant ratio of approximately 250 microg/L dissolved As per 1 mg/kg P-mobilizable As. We use this relationship in a simple model of groundwater recharge to propose that the distribution of groundwater As in shallow aquifers of the Bengal Basin could primarily reflect the different flushing histories of sand formations deposited in the region over the past several thousand years.

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