Elevated uranium in drinking water sources in basement aquifers of southern India

Groundwater resources in the crystalline basement complex of India are crucial for supplying drinking water in both rural and urban settings. Groundwater depletion is recognised as a challenge across parts of India due to over-abstraction, but groundwater quality constraints are perhaps even more wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied geochemistry 2021-10, Vol.133, p.105092, Article 105092
Hauptverfasser: Lapworth, Dan J., Brauns, Bentje, Chattopadhyay, Somsubhra, Gooddy, Daren C., Loveless, Sian E., MacDonald, Alan M., McKenzie, Andrew A., Muddu, Sekhar, Nara, Siva N.V.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Groundwater resources in the crystalline basement complex of India are crucial for supplying drinking water in both rural and urban settings. Groundwater depletion is recognised as a challenge across parts of India due to over-abstraction, but groundwater quality constraints are perhaps even more widespread and often overlooked at the local scale. Uranium contamination in basement aquifers has been reported in many parts of India, locally exceeding WHO drinking water guideline values of 30 μg/L and posing a potential health risk. In this study 130 water samples were collected across three crystalline basement catchments to assess hydrochemical, geological and anthropogenic controls on uranium mobility and occurrence in drinking water sources. Groundwaters with uranium concentrations exceeding 30 μg/L were found in all three study catchments (30% of samples overall), with concentrations up to 589 μg/L detected. There appears to be a geological control on the occurrence of uranium in groundwater with the granitic gneiss of the Halli and Bengaluru study areas having higher mean uranium concentrations (51 and 68 μg/L respectively) compared to the sheared gneiss of the Berambadi catchment (6.4 μg/L). Uranium – nitrate relationships indicate that fertiliser sources are not a major control on uranium occurrence in these case studies which include two catchments with a long legacy of intense agricultural land use. Geochemical modelling confirmed uranium speciation was dominated by uranyl carbonate species, particularly ternary complexes with calcium, consistent with uranium mobility being affected by redox controls and the presence of carbonates. Urban leakage in Bengaluru led to low pH and low bicarbonate groundwater hydrochemistry, reducing uranium mobility and altering uranium speciation. Since the majority of inhabitants in Karnataka depend on groundwater abstraction from basement aquifers for drinking water and domestic use, exposure to elevated uranium is a public health concern. Improved monitoring, understanding and treatment of high uranium drinking water sources in this region is essential to safeguard public health. •Groundwater uranium (U) > 30 μg/L in 30% of samples, maximum U conc. of 589 μg/L.•Geogenic sources control groundwater U with lower U in sheared granitic gneiss.•No evidence found for fertiliser U sources even in intensively farmed regions.•Abstraction may enhance oxidizing conditions in aquifers promoting U mobility.•Urban leakage may cont
ISSN:0883-2927
1872-9134
DOI:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2021.105092