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Issue Date:
2008
Publisher:
Applied Geochemistry
Citation:
Volume: 23, Issue: 11, Page : 3116-3126
Abstract:
To study the geological control on groundwater As concentrations in Red River delta, depthspecific
groundwater sampling and geophysical logging in 11 monitoring wells was conducted along a 45
km transect across the southern and central part of the delta, and the literature on the Red River delta's
Quaternary geological development was reviewed. The water samples (n = 30) were analyzed for As, major
ions, Fe2+, H2S, NH4, CH4, ??18O and ??D, and the geophysical log suite included natural gamma-ray,
formation and fluid electrical conductivity. The SW part of the transect intersects deposits of grey estuarine
clays and deltaic sands in a 15-20 km wide and 50-60 m deep Holocene incised valley. The NE part of the
transect consists of 60-120 m of Pleistocene yellowish alluvial deposits underneath 10-30 m of estuarine
clay overlain by a 10-20 m veneer of Holocene sediments. The distribution of ??18O-values (range -12.2? to
-6.3?) and hydraulic head in the sample wells indicate that the estuarine clay units divide the flow system
into an upper Holocene aquifer and a lower Pleistocene aquifer. The groundwater samples were all anoxic,
and contained Fe2+ (0.03-2.0 mM), Mn (0.7-320 ?M), SO4 (<2.1 ?M-0.75 mM), H2S (<0.1-7.0 ?M), NH4
(0.03-4.4 mM), and CH4 (0.08-14.5 mM). Generally, higher concentrations of NH4 and CH4 and low
concentrations of SO4 were found in the SW part of the transect, dominated by Holocene deposits, while the
opposite was the case for the NE part of the transect. The distribution of the groundwater As concentration
(<0.013-11.7 ?M; median 0.12 ?M (9 ?g/L)) is related to the distribution of NH4, CH4 and SO4. Low
concentrations of As (??0.32 ?M) were found in the Pleistocene aquifer, while the highest As concentrations
were found in the Holocene aquifer. PHREEQC-2 speciation calculations indicated that Fe2+ and H2S
concentrations are controlled by equilibrium for disordered mackinawite and precipitation of siderite. An
elevated groundwater salinity (Cl range 0.19-65.1 mM) was observed in both aquifers, and dominated in the
deep aquifer. A negative correlation between aqueous As and an estimate of reduced SO4 was observed,
indicating that Fe sulphide precipitation poses a secondary control on the groundwater As concentration. ??
2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.