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Mitigation and Remedy of Groundwater Arsenic Menace in India

Mitigation and Remedy of Groundwater Arsenic Menace in India

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<strong>Mitigation</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Remedy</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Groundwater</strong> <strong>Arsenic</strong> <strong>Menace</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>India</strong> : A Vision DocumentChapter- 6A Critical Appraisal- Future Risk, Scope to Remediate,Technological Competence, etc.6.1 Appraisal on Source <strong>and</strong> Mobilization <strong>in</strong> the Bengal Bas<strong>in</strong>After the first detection <strong>of</strong> arsenical dermatitis <strong>and</strong> its causal connection with thedr<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g <strong>of</strong> high-As groundwater by the affected agglomerations <strong>of</strong> population, <strong>in</strong> a few districts<strong>of</strong> West Bengal (1983-84), it was only natural that the <strong>in</strong>itial systematic studies on the problemwere cl<strong>in</strong>ical, epidemiological <strong>and</strong> chemical-analytical <strong>in</strong> technique <strong>and</strong> orientation (Chakrabortyet al., 1982; Saha, 1984; Chakraborty <strong>and</strong> Saha, 1987; Chatterjee et al., 1995; Das et al., 1996;Mondal et al., 1996). One fallout <strong>of</strong> this <strong>in</strong>itial perception <strong>of</strong> the loom<strong>in</strong>g threat was theformulation <strong>of</strong> the question as to whether this arsenic contam<strong>in</strong>ation has been caused <strong>and</strong> isbe<strong>in</strong>g caused by anthropogenic factors (e.g., large-scale use <strong>of</strong> chemical fertilizers, pesticides,herbicides, <strong>and</strong> excessive withdrawal <strong>of</strong> groundwaters) or by natural (geogenic) factors. It isnow generally agreed that the source is <strong>of</strong> geological orig<strong>in</strong>, be<strong>in</strong>g the top strata <strong>of</strong> the BengalBas<strong>in</strong>, underly<strong>in</strong>g the Bengal Delta Pla<strong>in</strong> (WHO, 2008). The percolation <strong>of</strong> fertilizer residues canhave only a modify<strong>in</strong>g role on a limited scale, that too <strong>in</strong> the very upper strata. The question <strong>of</strong> thepossible role <strong>of</strong> excessive withdrawal <strong>of</strong> groundwater, however, cont<strong>in</strong>ues to divide the op<strong>in</strong>ion.Initial studies <strong>of</strong> this natural source <strong>and</strong> pathways <strong>of</strong> the metalloid came to centre ondel<strong>in</strong>eation <strong>of</strong> spatial extents <strong>of</strong> the contam<strong>in</strong>ation (reported, till the1990s, as conf<strong>in</strong>ed to theregions east <strong>of</strong> the Bhagirathi-Hugly River), <strong>and</strong> the stratigraphic level <strong>of</strong> occurrence (reportedas conf<strong>in</strong>ed to the Me<strong>and</strong>er Belt <strong>of</strong> the Upper Delta Pla<strong>in</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Late Quaternary). Based on theargument that the contam<strong>in</strong>ation occurs <strong>in</strong> the pore-waters <strong>of</strong> the terrigenous sediments <strong>of</strong> theGanga-Brahmaputra-Meghna (GBM) delta, it was naively felt that the contam<strong>in</strong>ant (arsenic)has an <strong>in</strong>l<strong>and</strong> source. The chief <strong>in</strong>terest has been put <strong>in</strong> locat<strong>in</strong>g the possible <strong>in</strong>l<strong>and</strong> source. Andthe speculations have ranged from the sulphide belts <strong>of</strong> Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, North Bengal tothe coal seams <strong>of</strong> the neighbour<strong>in</strong>g Godwana Bas<strong>in</strong>s, the basic rocks <strong>of</strong> the Rajmahal Traps, themetamorphic schists <strong>of</strong> the Lesser Himalaya, even as far to a common source as <strong>in</strong> theQamdo-Siman volcanic <strong>and</strong> ophiolite prov<strong>in</strong>ce <strong>in</strong> Ch<strong>in</strong>a for the whole mosaic <strong>of</strong> arsenicshow-ups <strong>in</strong> the entire south-east Asia (e.g.,PHED,1991; Chakraborty et al., 1994; Das et al.,1996; Bhattacharya et al., 1997; Dhar et al., 1997; Saha, 1998; Nickson et al., 1998; Acharya etal., 1999; Stanger, 2005). The ma<strong>in</strong> thrust <strong>of</strong> these studies was, however, on the chemicalcharacterization <strong>of</strong> groundwater, with elevated levels <strong>of</strong> arsenic concentration, redox state,arsenic speciation, age <strong>of</strong> waters, depth control, etc. All <strong>of</strong> this leads to the conclusion that thecontam<strong>in</strong>ated water is enriched by Fe, Mn, Ca, Mg, bicarbonates, <strong>and</strong> depleted <strong>in</strong> sulphate,fluoride, chloride. The pH, <strong>in</strong> this water ranges from 6.5 to 8. The redox condition is usuallyreduc<strong>in</strong>g. It is high on organic matter content; lodged mostly <strong>in</strong> s<strong>and</strong> coat<strong>in</strong>gs, or sorbed on clays,HFOs, <strong>and</strong> organic matters. As-concentration, <strong>in</strong> this water, is dim<strong>in</strong>ish<strong>in</strong>g down-depth.NIH & CGWB 109

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