Abnormally High Ammonium of Natural Origin in a Coastal Aquifer-Aquitard System in the Pearl River Delta, China

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Titel: Abnormally High Ammonium of Natural Origin in a Coastal Aquifer-Aquitard System in the Pearl River Delta, China
Autoren: Cherry, JA, Wang, Y, Wang, X, Zhi, B, Du, H, Wen, D, Jiao, JJ
Quelle: Environmental Science & Technology. 44:7470-7475
Verlagsinformationen: American Chemical Society (ACS), 2010.
Publikationsjahr: 2010
Schlagwörter: 2. Zero hunger, China, 0207 environmental engineering, Fresh Water, 02 engineering and technology, 01 natural sciences, Ammonia - analysis, 6. Clean water, Fresh Water - chemistry, Ammonia, 13. Climate action, 14. Life underwater, 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Beschreibung: High-nitrogen loadings of rivers and aquifers systems are a major concern because of potential effects on human health and water quality impacts such as eutrophication of lakes and coastal zones. This nitrogen enrichment is commonly attributed to anthropogenic sources such as sewage and agricultural and industrial wastes. The aims of this study were to delineate spatial distribution of groundwater ammonium in the coastal aquifer system in Pearl River Delta (PRD), China and to identify the origin of the abnormally high ammonium. A total of 40 boreholes were drilled to collect core samples of the aquitard and groundwater samples in the basal aquifer. The core samples were used for extraction of pore water for centrifugation and bulk chemical analyses in laboratory. Unlike previous studies which focused mainly on the aquifer, this study treated the aquifer-aquitard system as a hydrogeochemical continuum. The results show that the aquifer-aquitard system contains an exceptionally large total ammonium mass. Ammonium occurred at concentrations up to 390 mg/L in the basal sand Pleistocene aquifer 20-50 m deep, the largest concentration reported for groundwater globally. This ammonium was natural, areally extensive (1600 km(2)) and originated in the overlying Holocene-Pleistocene aquitard and entered the aquifer by groundwater transport and diffusion. Total ammonium in the aquifer (190 × 10(6) kg) was exceeded by total ammonium in the aquitard (8600 × 10(6) kg) by a factor of 45. Much organic nitrogen remained in the aquitard available for conversion to ammonium. This natural ammonium in the aquifer was slowly transported into the PRD river channels and the estuary of the South China Sea. The rate of this contribution will likely be greatly increased by sand dredging in the river channels and estuary. Although the ammonium in PRD groundwater occurred in the largest concentrations and mass reported globally, the literature shows no reports of other delta aquitards having been examined for ammonium occurrence and therefore abundant ammonium formed in aquitards rich in organic matter may not be uncommon and this "geologic" source of ammonium may present a large and hitherto unappreciated source of nitrogen discharging to surface waters.
Publikationsart: Article
Sprache: English
ISSN: 1520-5851
0013-936X
DOI: 10.1021/es1021697
Zugangs-URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20806932
https://core.ac.uk/display/37961906
https://www.cabdirect.org/cabdirect/abstract/20103316948
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/es1021697
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20806932
https://hydro.geo.ua.edu/jiao/research/FullPaper/Jiao%20et%20al%20ammonium%202010.pdf
http://hub.hku.hk/handle/10722/139152
http://hdl.handle.net/10722/139152
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....4815ceb59e2982e60cb40debe10aae91
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:High-nitrogen loadings of rivers and aquifers systems are a major concern because of potential effects on human health and water quality impacts such as eutrophication of lakes and coastal zones. This nitrogen enrichment is commonly attributed to anthropogenic sources such as sewage and agricultural and industrial wastes. The aims of this study were to delineate spatial distribution of groundwater ammonium in the coastal aquifer system in Pearl River Delta (PRD), China and to identify the origin of the abnormally high ammonium. A total of 40 boreholes were drilled to collect core samples of the aquitard and groundwater samples in the basal aquifer. The core samples were used for extraction of pore water for centrifugation and bulk chemical analyses in laboratory. Unlike previous studies which focused mainly on the aquifer, this study treated the aquifer-aquitard system as a hydrogeochemical continuum. The results show that the aquifer-aquitard system contains an exceptionally large total ammonium mass. Ammonium occurred at concentrations up to 390 mg/L in the basal sand Pleistocene aquifer 20-50 m deep, the largest concentration reported for groundwater globally. This ammonium was natural, areally extensive (1600 km(2)) and originated in the overlying Holocene-Pleistocene aquitard and entered the aquifer by groundwater transport and diffusion. Total ammonium in the aquifer (190 × 10(6) kg) was exceeded by total ammonium in the aquitard (8600 × 10(6) kg) by a factor of 45. Much organic nitrogen remained in the aquitard available for conversion to ammonium. This natural ammonium in the aquifer was slowly transported into the PRD river channels and the estuary of the South China Sea. The rate of this contribution will likely be greatly increased by sand dredging in the river channels and estuary. Although the ammonium in PRD groundwater occurred in the largest concentrations and mass reported globally, the literature shows no reports of other delta aquitards having been examined for ammonium occurrence and therefore abundant ammonium formed in aquitards rich in organic matter may not be uncommon and this "geologic" source of ammonium may present a large and hitherto unappreciated source of nitrogen discharging to surface waters.
ISSN:15205851
0013936X
DOI:10.1021/es1021697