Charlotte Sparrenbom
Senior lecturer
Groundwater arsenic biogeochemistry - Key questions & use of tracers to understand arsenic-prone groundwater systems
Author
Summary, in English
Over 100,000,000 people worldwide are exposed to high arsenic groundwater utilised for drinking or cooking. The consequent global avoidable disease burden is estimated to be of the order of 100,000 avoidable deaths or more per annum from just direct exposures e i.e. excluding indirect exposure (from rice and other foods) and excluding morbidity. Notwithstanding 1000s of papers published on arsenic (hydro) (bio)geochemistry, there remain a number of key outstanding questions to be addressed in relation to arsenic geoscience e these include questions related to: (i) the role of human activities - irrigation, agriculture and other land uses e on arsenic mobilisation in groundwaters; (ii) the specific
sources, nature and role of organics, minerals and microbial communities involved in arsenic mobilisation; (iii) the relationship to microscopic to macroscopic scale geological (including tectonic) and evolution processes; (iv) unravelling the over-printing of multiple processes in complex highly heterogeneous aquifer systems and (v) using increasing understanding of the controls of arsenic mobility in groundwaters systems to informing improved locally-relevant remediation and mitigation approaches.
This article further summarises how the 9 further papers in this thematic issue address some of these questions through the use of chemical and/or isotopic tracers.
sources, nature and role of organics, minerals and microbial communities involved in arsenic mobilisation; (iii) the relationship to microscopic to macroscopic scale geological (including tectonic) and evolution processes; (iv) unravelling the over-printing of multiple processes in complex highly heterogeneous aquifer systems and (v) using increasing understanding of the controls of arsenic mobility in groundwaters systems to informing improved locally-relevant remediation and mitigation approaches.
This article further summarises how the 9 further papers in this thematic issue address some of these questions through the use of chemical and/or isotopic tracers.
Department/s
- Quaternary Sciences
Publishing year
2019-05-27
Language
English
Pages
1635-1641
Publication/Series
Geoscience Frontiers
Volume
10
Issue
5
Document type
Journal article review
Publisher
China University of Geosciences (Beijing) and Peking University
Topic
- Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
Keywords
- Groundwater arsenic tracers
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1674-9871