• Title of article

    Hydrogeochemical comparison and effects of overlapping redox zones on groundwater arsenic near the Western (Bhagirathi sub-basin, India) and Eastern (Meghna sub-basin, Bangladesh) margins of the Bengal Basin

  • Author/Authors

    abhijit Mukherjee and Satish G. Kandlikar ، نويسنده , , Mattias von Br?mssen، نويسنده , , Bridget R. Scanlon، نويسنده , , Prosun Bhattacharya، نويسنده , , Alan E. Fryar، نويسنده , , Md. Aziz Hasan، نويسنده , , Kazi Matin Ahmed، نويسنده , , Debashis Chatterjee، نويسنده , , Gunnar Jacks، نويسنده , , Ondra Sracek، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    31
  • To page
    48
  • Abstract
    Although arsenic (As) contamination of groundwater in the Bengal Basin has received wide attention over the past decade, comparative studies of hydrogeochemistry in geologically different sub-basins within the basin have been lacking. Groundwater samples were collected from sub-basins in the western margin (River Bhagirathi sub-basin, Nadia, India; 90 samples) and eastern margin (River Meghna sub-basin; Brahmanbaria, Bangladesh; 35 samples) of the Bengal Basin. Groundwater in the western site (Nadia) has mostly Ca–HCO3 water while that in the eastern site (Brahmanbaria) is much more variable consisting of at least six different facies. The two sites show differences in major and minor solute trends indicating varying pathways of hydrogeochemical evolution However, both sites have similar reducing, postoxic environments (pe: + 5 to − 2) with high concentrations of dissolved organic carbon, indicating dominantly metal-reducing processes and similarity in As mobilization mechanism. The trends of various redox-sensitive solutes (e.g. As, CH4, Fe, Mn, NO3−, NH4+, SO42−) indicate overlapping redox zones, leading to partial redox equilibrium conditions where As, once liberated from source minerals, would tend to remain in solution because of the complex interplay among the electron acceptors.
  • Keywords
    Arsenic , groundwater , redox , Bengal Basin , hydrogeochemistry
  • Journal title
    Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
  • Record number

    693937