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      Recharge of low-arsenic aquifers tapped by community wells in Araihazar, Bangladesh, inferred from environmental isotopes : RECHARGE OF LOW-AS AQUIFERS IN BANGLADESH

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="P1">More than 100,000 community wells have been installed in the 150–300 m depth range throughout Bangladesh over the past decade to provide low-arsenic drinking water (&lt;10 μg/L As), but little is known about how aquifers tapped by these wells are recharged. Within a 25 km <sup>2</sup> area of Bangladesh east of Dhaka, groundwater from 65 low-As wells in the 35–240 m depth range was sampled for tritium ( <sup>3</sup>H), oxygen and hydrogen isotopes of water ( <sup>18</sup>O/ <sup>16</sup>O and <sup>2</sup>H/ <sup>1</sup>H), carbon isotope ratios in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC, <sup>14</sup>C/ <sup>12</sup>C and <sup>13</sup>C/ <sup>12</sup>C), noble gases, and a suite of dissolved constituents, including major cations, anions, and trace elements. At shallow depths (&lt;90 m), 24 out of 42 wells contain detectable <sup>3</sup>H of up to 6 TU, indicating the presence of groundwater recharged within 60 years. Radiocarbon ( <sup>14</sup>C) ages in DIC range from modern to 10 kyr. In the 90–240 m depth range, however, only 5 wells shallower than 150 m contain detectable <sup>3</sup>H (&lt;0.3 TU) and <sup>14</sup>C ages of DIC cluster around 10 kyr. The radiogenic helium ( <sup>4</sup>He) content in groundwater increases linearly across the entire range of <sup>14</sup>C ages at a rate of 2.5×10 <sup>−12</sup> ccSTP <sup>4</sup>He g <sup>−1</sup> yr <sup>−1</sup>. Within the samples from depths &gt;90 m, systematic relationships between <sup>18</sup>O/ <sup>16</sup>O, <sup>2</sup>H/ <sup>1</sup>H, <sup>13</sup>C/ <sup>12</sup>C and <sup>14</sup>C/ <sup>12</sup>C, and variations in noble gas temperatures, suggest that changes in monsoon intensity and vegetation cover occurred at the onset of the Holocene, when the sampled water was recharged. Thus, the deeper low-As aquifers remain relatively isolated from the shallow, high-As aquifer. </p>

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Water Resources Research
                Water Resour. Res.
                Wiley
                00431397
                May 2016
                May 2016
                May 01 2016
                : 52
                : 5
                : 3324-3349
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University; Palisades New York USA
                [2 ]Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences; Columbia University; New York New York USA
                [3 ]Now at Geosyntec Consultants; Huntington Beach California USA
                [4 ]Environmental Science Department, Barnard College; New York New York USA
                [5 ]Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering; Columbia University; New York New York USA
                [6 ]School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Queens College, City University of New York; New York New York USA
                [7 ]Department of Geology; Dhaka University; Dhaka Bangladesh
                Article
                10.1002/2015WR018224
                5617127
                28966406
                6405476d-6090-46f2-9ee7-e72cdedd5c1a
                © 2016

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions

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