Ross T. Nickson, J.M. McArthur, William Burgess, Kazi Matin Ahmed et al.
Ross T. Nickson, J.M. McArthur, Peter Ravenscroft, W. G. Burgess et al.
Amr Chowdhury, Md. Zabed Hossain, Ross T. Nickson, Mizanur Rahman et al.
Bangladesh is facing the problem of arsenic poisoning in drinking water. \nAround 27% of the tubewells, which supply drinking water to most of the \npopulation, have arsenic concentrations above the government of \nBangladesh limit of 50 t.g per litre. This means that a quarter of the •&...
Barbara Mueller, K Abdul, S Jaysinghe, E Chandana et al.
Unfortunately, Nepal's current arsenic issueconcerning ground water was recognized much later than in other countries of South-Asia (e.g. West Bengal (India), Bangladesh, Cambodia, Vietnam, China). Nepal did not seem to be much affected by As poisoning ground water hosted by quaternary alluvial sedi...
Jakariya, Salma R. Haque, Md. Zabed Hossain, Ross T. Nickson et al.
The severity of the problem of arsenic in ground water in Bangladesh is now well \nrecognized. 97% of the population relies on ground water for drinking and cooking \npurposes and it is estimated that one third of the country may arsenic in the \nsubsurface. This amount to many millions ...
Ross T. Nickson, Md. Zabed Hossain, Jakariya, Nadim Khandakar et al.
Jakariya, Salma R. Haque, Ross T. Nickson, Md. Zabed Hossain et al.
The severity of the problem of arsenic in ground water in Bangladesh is now well \nrecognized. 97% of the population relics on ground water for drinking and cooking \npurposes and it is estimated that half of the country may have arsenic in the subsurface. \nThe source of the arsenic is ...