Authors
Matthew L Polizzotto, Benjamin D Kocar, Shawn G Benner, Michael Sampson, Scott Fendorf
Publication date
2008/7/24
Journal
Nature
Volume
454
Issue
7203
Pages
505-508
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Tens of millions of people in south and southeast Asia routinely consume ground water that has unsafe arsenic levels,. Arsenic is naturally derived from eroded Himalayan sediments, and is believed to enter solution following reductive release from solid phases under anaerobic conditions. However, the processes governing aqueous concentrations and locations of arsenic release to pore water remain unresolved, limiting our ability to predict arsenic concentrations spatially (between wells) and temporally (future concentrations) and to assess the impact of human activities on the arsenic problem,,,,,,. This uncertainty is partly attributed to a poor understanding of groundwater flow paths altered by extensive irrigation pumping in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta, where most research has focused. Here, using hydrologic and (bio)geochemical measurements, we show that on the minimally disturbed Mekong delta of …
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