Authors
Matthew L Polizzotto, Charles F Harvey, Steve R Sutton, Scott Fendorf
Publication date
2005/12/27
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
102
Issue
52
Pages
18819-18823
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Arsenic is a contaminant in the groundwater of Holocene aquifers in Bangladesh, where ≈57 million people drink water with arsenic levels exceeding the limits set by the World Health Organization. Although arsenic is native to the sediments, the means by which it is released to groundwater remains unresolved. Contrary to the current paradigm, ferric (hydr)oxides appear to dominate the partitioning of arsenic in the near surface but have a limited impact at aquifer depths where wells extract groundwater with high arsenic concentrations. We present a sequence of evidence that, taken together, suggest that arsenic may be released in the near surface and then transported to depth. We establish that (i) the only portion of the sediment profile with conditions destabilizing to arsenic in our analysis is in the surface or near-surface environment; (ii) a consistent input of arsenic via sediment deposition exists; (iii) retardation …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ML Polizzotto, CF Harvey, SR Sutton, S Fendorf - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2005