Arsenic fate in the Brahmaputra river basin aquifers: Controls of geogenic processes, provenance and water-rock interactions

S. Verma,A. Mukherjee,C. Mahanta,R. Choudhury,R. P. Badoni,Gopal Joshi

Published 2019 in Applied Geochemistry

ABSTRACT

Abstract The influence of aquifer sediments provenance and geochemical processes on groundwater solute chemistry, including the fate of groundwater arsenic (As) in aquifers for three distinct tectono-morphic zones (north-western, northern, and southern [NW, N, and S] in the basin of Himalayan Mega Rivers, i.e., Brahmaputra river basin (BRB), and adjoining the Himalayas and Indo-Burmese ranges, have been delineated. The presence of fluvial re-worked quartz, feldspar, and mica along with orogeny-sourced ferromagnesian minerals contained aquifers sediments in the NW and N regions are hypothesized to be derived from the Himalayan system. The S-aquifers mineralogy differs from northern aquifers by a higher proportion of Fe/Mg aluminosilicates, phyllosilicates/clay minerals, derived from the Indo-Burmese ranges. The dissolved As distribution is highly variable among the different alluvial aquifers. The S-region is highly enriched in groundwater As (bdl to 5.53 μM or 415 μg/L, mean 1.77 μM) compared to NW and N regions (bdl to 1.8 μM or 134 μg/L, mean 0.28 μM [60% As-contaminated samples]; bdl to 2.45 μM or 184 μg/L, mean 0.68 μM [65% As-contaminated samples] respectively). More than 92% of groundwater samples in the S-region are enriched with As (>50 μg/L), which draws a distinct difference from the NW and N regions of BRB aquifers. Reaction-path models suggest intense chemical weathering of S-aquifer matrix due to the higher equilibrium (more stable) of secondary mineral phases with the solution (groundwater), as compared to NW and N regions. The present study proposes a model for the geological control and effect of weathering/water–sediment reaction on As-fate and mobilization mechanism in the groundwater system of the barely studied Brahmaputra river basin aquifers.

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