Nickson, R and Sengupta, C and Mitra, P and Dave, S N and Banerjee, A K and Bhattacharyya, A and Basu, S and Kakoti, N and Moorthy, N S and Wasuja, M and Kumar, M and Mishra, D S and Ghosh, A and Vaish, D P and Srivastava, A K and Tripathi, R M and Singh, S N and Prasad, R and Bhattacharjee, S and Deverill, P (2007) Current knowledge on the distribution of arsenic in groundwater in five states of India. Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A-Toxic/Hazardous Substances & Environmental Engineering, 42 (12). pp. 1707-1718.
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Abstract
Testing of groundwater used for drinking for arsenic has been undertaken more widely by state governments in several states of India in recent years with the support of UNICEF, Available data for five states are collated in this paper and this provides the most up-to-date picture of areas known to be affected by arsenic in groundwater in the Indian portion of the Ganges-Brahmaputra river basin. In West Bengal, water from 132,262 government installed handpumps in 8 districts has been tested and overall 25.5% of samples were found to contain arsenic at concentrations greater than 50 (mu) gL(-1) and 57.9% at concentrations greater than 10 mu gL(-1). On the banks of the Brahmaputra in Assam, to date, samples from 5,729 government handpump sources in 22 districts have been tested for arsenic. Overall, samples from 6.3% of sources were found to contain arsenic at concentrations greater than 50 mu gL(-1) and 26. 1% at concentrations greater than 10 mu gL(-1). In Bihar, on the River Ganges upstream of West Bengal, 66,623 sources from 11 districts have been tested and water samples from 10.8% of sources were found to contain arsenic at concentrations greater than 50 mu gL(-1) and 28.9% at concentrations greater than 10 jtgL-'. Upstream of Bihar in Uttar Pradesh, home of the Taj Mahal, to date water samples from 20,126 government-installed handpump sources have been tested. As a result 2.4% of the samples tested were found to contain arsenic at concentrations greater than 50 mu gL(-1) and 21.5% at concentrations greater than 10 mu gL(-1). Finally in one district of Jharkhand, lying on the Ganges alluvial plain between Bihar and West Bengal, 9,007 sources have been tested and water samples from 3.7% of sources were found to contain arsenic at concentrations greater than 50 mu gL(-1) and 7.5% at concentrations greater than 10 mu gL(-1). State governments have adopted different sampling strategies and these are described in this paper. Testing is ongoing in several states and the complete picture is yet to emerge in some areas.
Item Type: | Article |
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Official URL/DOI: | DOI: 10.1080/10934520701564194 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | arsenic; arsenicosis; groundwater; drinking water; West Bengal; Assam; Bihar; Uttar Pradesh; Jharkhand; India |
Divisions: | Corrosion and Surface Engineering |
ID Code: | 3456 |
Deposited By: | INVALID USER |
Deposited On: | 19 Jul 2011 11:42 |
Last Modified: | 22 Apr 2013 16:32 |
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