Journal ArticleOpen Access
High‐Arsenic Groundwater in the Southwestern Bengal Basin Caused by a Lithologically Controlled Deep Flow System
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Dhaka, University of Delaware, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, ...
Published InGeophysical Research Letters
Year2019
Citations36
Abstract
Abstract Elevated arsenic in Bengal Basin aquifers threatens human health. Most deep (>150 m) groundwater in Pleistocene aquifers is low in arsenic; however higher concentrations have been reported in the southwest border region. Here, we establish that this extensive arsenic contamination at depth is not associated with well failure. A combination of geochemistry and flow modeling constrains the factors that contribute to arsenic contamination at depth in this region. Deep groundwater in the affected area is younger (2.0 ± 0.6 kyr) than deep, low‐arsenic groundwater elsewhere (12.0 ± 4.0 kyr) based on radiocarbon. Stratigraphic data indicate pre‐Holocene deposition of the contaminated aquifers, but few low‐permeability strata. Numerical modeling indicates that this stratigraphic anomaly permits a natural flow system that transports…
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