Web Release Date: April 12,
Mobilization of Arsenic During One-Year Incubations of Grey Aquifer Sands from Araihazar, Bangladesh


and

1Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering, Columbia University, New York, New York 10025, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, New York 10964, Department of Geology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh, and Barnard College, Columbia University, New York, New York 10025
Received for review December 7, 2006
Revised manuscript received March 5, 2007
Accepted March 12, 2007
Abstract:
Elevated As concentrations in shallow groundwater pose
a major health threat in Bangladesh and similarly affected
countries, yet there is little consensus on the mechanism
of As release to groundwater or how it might be influenced
by human activities. In this study, the rate of As release
was measured directly with incubations lasting 11 months,
using sediment and groundwater collected simultaneously
in Bangladesh and maintained under anaerobic conditions
throughout the study. Groundwater and gray sediment were
collected as diluted slurries between 5 and 38 m in
depth, a range over which ambient groundwater As
concentrations increased from 20 to 100
g L-1. Arsenic
was released to groundwater in slurries from 5 and 12 m in
depth at a relatively constant rate of 21 ± 4 (2
) and 23
± 6
g As kg-1 yr-1, respectively. Amendment with a modest
level of acetate increased the rate of As release only at
12 m (82 ± 18
g kg-1 yr-1). Although the groundwater As
concentration was initially highest at 38 m depth, no
release of As was observed. These results indicate that
the spatial distribution of dissolved As in Bangladesh and
local rates of release to groundwater are not necessarily
linked. Iron release during the incubations did not occur
concurrently with As release, providing further confirmation
that the two processes are not directly coupled. Small periodic
additions of oxygen suppressed the release of As from
sediments at all three depths, which supports the notion
that anoxia is a prerequisite for accumulation of As in
Bangladesh groundwater.
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