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Journal ArticleDOI

Occurrence of Heavy Metals in Groundwater Along the Lithological Interface of K/T Boundary, Peninsular India: A Special Focus on Source, Geochemical Mobility and Health Risk

TLDR
In this article, the authors focused on the health impacts due to the heavy metals pollution in a known Cretaceous-Tertiary (K/T) contact region (Tiruchinopoly, Tamilnadu) of peninsular India, using various pollution indices, statistical, and geochemical analyses.
Abstract
Evaluation of the hydrogeochemical processes governing the heavy metal distribution and the associated health risk is important in managing and protecting the health of freshwater resources. This study mainly focused on the health impacts due to the heavy metals pollution in a known Cretaceous-Tertiary (K/T) contact region (Tiruchinopoly, Tamilnadu) of peninsular India, using various pollution indices, statistical, and geochemical analyses. A total of 63 samples were collected from the hard rock aquifers and sedimentary formations during southwest monsoon and analysed for heavy metals, such as Li, Be, Al, Rb, Sr, Cs, Ba, pb, Mn, Fe, Cr, Zn, Ga, Cu, As, Ni, and Co. Ba was the dominant element that ranged from 441 to 42,638 μg/l in hard rock aquifers, whereas Zn was the major element in sedimentary formations, with concentrations that ranged from 44 to 118,281 μg/l. The concentrations of Fe, Ni, Cr, Al, Cr, and Ni fell above the permissible limit in both of the formations. However, the calculated heavy metal evaluation index (HEI), heavy metal pollution index (HPI), and the degree of contamination (Cd) parameters were higher in the sedimentary formation along the contact zone of the K/T boundary. Excessive health risks from consumption of contaminated groundwater were mostly confined to populations in the northern and southwestern regions of the study area. Carcinogenic risk assessment suggests that there are elevated risks of cancer due to prolonged consumption of untreated groundwater. Ba, Sr, and Zn were found to be geochemically highly mobile due to the partitioning between the rock matrix and groundwater, aided by the formation of soluble carbonato-complexes. Factor analysis indicates that the metals are mainly derived from the host rocks and anthropogenic inputs are relatively insignificant. Overall, this study indicated that groundwater in K/T contact zones is vulnerable to contamination because of the favorable geochemical factors. Long-term monitoring of such contact zones is required to avert the potential health hazards associated with consumption of the contaminated groundwater.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sources and Consequences of Groundwater Contamination.

TL;DR: The state of the science on groundwater contamination is reviewed in this paper, and the papers published in this special issue are summarized in terms of their contributions to the literature, and some key issues for advancing research on groundwater contamination are proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isotopic signatures, hydrochemical and multivariate statistical analysis of seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of Chennai and Tiruvallur District, Tamil Nadu, India

TL;DR: In this article , stable isotopic analyses of 18O were performed on 24 groundwater samples collected from various locations throughout the research region based on EC, TDS, Na, and Cl- concentrations for both seasons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human health risk assessment of heavy metal and pathogenic contamination in surface water of the Punnakayal estuary, South India

TL;DR: In this article , the water quality of Punnakayal estuary in the Thamirabarani River system from south India, a vital source of water for drinking and domestic purposes, industrial usage, and irrigation was assessed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatio-temporal variation of groundwater hydrochemistry and suitability for drinking and irrigation in Arba Minch Town, Ethiopia: An integrated approach using water quality index, multivariate statistics, and GIS

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors identify the concentrations and spatial dispersal of various ions, the appropriateness of groundwater, and the hydrochemical processes that contribute to its chemistry using GIS, Groundwater Quality Index (GWQI), and multivariate statistical methods (MSM).
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