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Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers

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Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers. / Meharg, A. A.; Scrimegeour, C.; Hossain , S. A. et al.
In: Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 40, No. 16, 2006, p. 4928-4935.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Meharg, AA, Scrimegeour, C, Hossain , SA, Fuller, K, Cruickshank, K, Williams, P & Kinniburgh, DG 2006, 'Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 40, no. 16, pp. 4928-4935. https://doi.org/10.1021/es060722b

APA

Meharg, A. A., Scrimegeour, C., Hossain , S. A., Fuller, K., Cruickshank, K., Williams, P., & Kinniburgh, D. G. (2006). Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers. Environmental Science and Technology, 40(16), 4928-4935. https://doi.org/10.1021/es060722b

Vancouver

Meharg AA, Scrimegeour C, Hossain SA, Fuller K, Cruickshank K, Williams P et al. Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers. Environmental Science and Technology. 2006;40(16):4928-4935. doi: 10.1021/es060722b

Author

Meharg, A. A. ; Scrimegeour, C. ; Hossain , S. A. et al. / Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers. In: Environmental Science and Technology. 2006 ; Vol. 40, No. 16. pp. 4928-4935.

Bibtex

@article{713fd0188ef24b59acb3d7c0ec1d5b10,
title = "Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers",
abstract = "We present data showing that arsenic (As) was codeposited with organic carbon (OC) in Bengal Delta sediments as As and OC concentrations are highly (p < 0.001) positively correlated in core profiles collected from widely dispersed geographical sites with different sedimentary depositional histories. Analysis of modern day depositional environments revealed that the As−OC correlations observed in cores are due to As retention and high OC inputs in vegetated zones of the deltaic environment. We hypothesize that elevated concentrations of As occur in vegetated wetland sediments due to concentration and retention of arsenate in aerated root zones and animal burrows where copious iron(III) oxides are deposited. On burial of the sediment, degradation of organic carbon from plant and animal biomass detritus provides the reducing conditions to dissolve iron(III) oxides and release arsenite into the porewater. As tubewell abstracted aquifer water is an invaluable resource on which much of Southeast Asia is now dependent, this increased understanding of the processes responsible for As buildup and release will identify, through knowledge of the palaeosedimentary environment, which sediments are at most risk of having high arsenic concentrations in porewater. Our data allow the development of a new unifying hypothesis of how As is mobilized into groundwaters in river flood plains and deltas of Southeast Asia, namely that in these highly biologically productive environments, As and OC are codeposited, and the codeposited OC drives As release from the sediments. ",
author = "Meharg, {A. A.} and C. Scrimegeour and Hossain, {S. A.} and K. Fuller and K. Cruickshank and Paul Williams and D.G. Kinniburgh",
year = "2006",
doi = "10.1021/es060722b",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "4928--4935",
journal = "Environmental Science and Technology",
issn = "0013-936X",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "16",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Codeposition of Organic Carbon and Arsenic in Bengal Delta Aquifers

AU - Meharg, A. A.

AU - Scrimegeour, C.

AU - Hossain , S. A.

AU - Fuller, K.

AU - Cruickshank, K.

AU - Williams, Paul

AU - Kinniburgh, D.G.

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - We present data showing that arsenic (As) was codeposited with organic carbon (OC) in Bengal Delta sediments as As and OC concentrations are highly (p < 0.001) positively correlated in core profiles collected from widely dispersed geographical sites with different sedimentary depositional histories. Analysis of modern day depositional environments revealed that the As−OC correlations observed in cores are due to As retention and high OC inputs in vegetated zones of the deltaic environment. We hypothesize that elevated concentrations of As occur in vegetated wetland sediments due to concentration and retention of arsenate in aerated root zones and animal burrows where copious iron(III) oxides are deposited. On burial of the sediment, degradation of organic carbon from plant and animal biomass detritus provides the reducing conditions to dissolve iron(III) oxides and release arsenite into the porewater. As tubewell abstracted aquifer water is an invaluable resource on which much of Southeast Asia is now dependent, this increased understanding of the processes responsible for As buildup and release will identify, through knowledge of the palaeosedimentary environment, which sediments are at most risk of having high arsenic concentrations in porewater. Our data allow the development of a new unifying hypothesis of how As is mobilized into groundwaters in river flood plains and deltas of Southeast Asia, namely that in these highly biologically productive environments, As and OC are codeposited, and the codeposited OC drives As release from the sediments.

AB - We present data showing that arsenic (As) was codeposited with organic carbon (OC) in Bengal Delta sediments as As and OC concentrations are highly (p < 0.001) positively correlated in core profiles collected from widely dispersed geographical sites with different sedimentary depositional histories. Analysis of modern day depositional environments revealed that the As−OC correlations observed in cores are due to As retention and high OC inputs in vegetated zones of the deltaic environment. We hypothesize that elevated concentrations of As occur in vegetated wetland sediments due to concentration and retention of arsenate in aerated root zones and animal burrows where copious iron(III) oxides are deposited. On burial of the sediment, degradation of organic carbon from plant and animal biomass detritus provides the reducing conditions to dissolve iron(III) oxides and release arsenite into the porewater. As tubewell abstracted aquifer water is an invaluable resource on which much of Southeast Asia is now dependent, this increased understanding of the processes responsible for As buildup and release will identify, through knowledge of the palaeosedimentary environment, which sediments are at most risk of having high arsenic concentrations in porewater. Our data allow the development of a new unifying hypothesis of how As is mobilized into groundwaters in river flood plains and deltas of Southeast Asia, namely that in these highly biologically productive environments, As and OC are codeposited, and the codeposited OC drives As release from the sediments.

U2 - 10.1021/es060722b

DO - 10.1021/es060722b

M3 - Journal article

VL - 40

SP - 4928

EP - 4935

JO - Environmental Science and Technology

JF - Environmental Science and Technology

SN - 0013-936X

IS - 16

ER -