Award Abstract # 0510750
Collaborative Research: Groundwater Dynamics and Arsenic Contamination in the Ganges Delta: Irrigated Agriculture, Subsurface Chemical Transport, and Aquifer Flushing

NSF Org: EAR
Division Of Earth Sciences
Recipient: MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
Initial Amendment Date: September 13, 2005
Latest Amendment Date: July 8, 2008
Award Number: 0510750
Award Instrument: Continuing Grant
Program Manager: Thomas Torgersen
EAR
 Division Of Earth Sciences
GEO
 Directorate for Geosciences
Start Date: September 1, 2005
End Date: August 31, 2009 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $428,494.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $428,494.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2005 = $107,281.00
FY 2006 = $181,512.00

FY 2007 = $66,505.00

FY 2008 = $73,196.00
History of Investigator:
  • Charles Harvey (Principal Investigator)
    charvey@mit.edu
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 MASSACHUSETTS AVE
CAMBRIDGE
MA  US  02139-4301
(617)253-1000
Sponsor Congressional District: 07
Primary Place of Performance: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 MASSACHUSETTS AVE
CAMBRIDGE
MA  US  02139-4301
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
07
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): E2NYLCDML6V1
Parent UEI: E2NYLCDML6V1
NSF Program(s): Hydrologic Sciences,
BE-UF: WATER CYCLE
Primary Program Source: app-0105 
app-0106 

app-0107 

01000809DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 0000, 1389, 1629, 4444, 7305, 7306, 9189, EGCH
Program Element Code(s): 157900, 730500
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.050

ABSTRACT

0510750
Harvey
A-1
We are now in a position to solve the puzzle of why dissolved arsenic concentrations are
dangerously high in the groundwater of the Ganges Delta. Over the last five years several research
groups have provided detailed characterizations of the static geochemical characteristics of groundwater
and sediments in arsenic-contaminated aquifers. The challenge now is to determine how groundwater
flow transports chemicals in and out of the subsurface, and hence controls subsurface
biogeochemistry. We propose to develop novel hydrologic methods to characterize the complex spatial
and temporal patterns of groundwater flow, and then to employ hydrogeologic models to study the
evolution of groundwater geochemistry. By combining dynamic hydrological models with geochemical
characterization we intend to answer key scientific questions that have thus far eluded us:
Why has arsenic not been flushed from some aquifers? Combined estimates of groundwater
residence times and arsenic retardation factors indicate that arsenic residence times are only decades to
centuries, implying that arsenic should be flushed from the aquifers that are thousands of years old. Is
dissolved arsenic supplied by a continuous source, or are high concentrations transient?
Will arsenic concentrations change in the future? Our field injection-withdrawal experiments show that
arsenic concentrations respond within days to biochemical perturbations. The adoption of dry-season
rice cultivation has dramatically altered geochemical input and outputs from aquifers. How does this
change affect subsurface geochemistry and dissolved arsenic concentrations?
Why do arsenic concentrations differ between neighboring wells? Arsenic concentrations at nearby
locations in grey-colored anoxic aquifers often differ greatly, despite similar sediment characteristics. Do
these dramatic gradients result from the pattern of groundwater flow and recharge?
What are the intellectual merits of the proposed activity?
These questions can only be resolved by determining how groundwater dynamics control
chemical input and output to aquifers over two timescales: (1) Seasonal cycle: The hydrology of Bangladesh
annually cycles between Monsoon flooding and dry-season arid conditions when evapotranspiration
greatly outstrips precipitation and irrigation water is pumped from aquifers to meet the transpiration
demands of crops. This cycle drives water table oscillations that create seasonally varying oxic/anoxic
conditions in soils and also drives water exchange between aquifers and surface water (rice paddies,
ponds and rivers). (2) Anthropogenic changes over decades: The Ganges Delta has been
dramatically altered over the last three decades by population growth and the advent of irrigated
agriculture. Groundwater irrigation has changed the location, timing and chemical content of recharge.
Anoxic irrigation water is ponded in rice fields over much of the land, thereby changing both the
hydrologic budget and the biogeochemistry of recharge, potentially mobilizing arsenic from soil layers that
may be rich in arsenic and iron (oxy)hydroxides. Furthermore, pumping changes flow-paths deep in
aquifers, affecting both the rates and locations of recharge as well as groundwater exchange with surface
water bodies that now receive much higher loads of untreated waste.
We propose to: (1) Build on our successful field program in Bangladesh by extending our field
characterization from vertical geochemical profiles at one location to three dimensional flow around this
location; (2) Characterize recharge and discharge and map transient flow-paths through the aquifer by
applying novel combination of natural isotope data and numerical inverse methods for groundwater flow;
(3) Conduct a detailed study of geochemical fluxes through the bottom of a rice field, now a principle
source of groundwater recharge at our site, and a very likely source of dissolved arsenic; (4) Construct
predictive numerical models that couple groundwater flow and recharge with the biogeochemical
transformations that control arsenic.
What are the broader impacts of the proposed activity?
This collaborative project is built on our successful and productive partnership over the last five
years. We will continue to place a significant emphasis on the education and transfer of technology, with
further exchange of students between BUET, MIT and Tufts. We also will continue to collaborate with
other research groups including Stanford, EAWAG in Switzerland, UBC in Vancouver and UCLA. Our
research findings should answer some key scientific questions and also help evaluate alternative arsenic
mitigation strategies and better manage water resources in Bangladesh.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Harvey, CF "Environmental science - Poisoned waters traced to source" NATURE , v.454 , 2008 , p.415 View record at Web of Science 10.1038/454415
Harvey, CF; Beckie, RD "Arsenic: Its biogeochemistry and transport in groundwater" METAL IONS IN BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS, VOL 44 , v.44 , 2005 , p.145 View record at Web of Science
Harvey, C. F., K. N. Ashfaque, W. Yu, A.B.M. Badruzzaman, M. Ashraf Ali, P. M. Oates, H. A. Michael, R. B. Neumann, R. Beckie, S. Islam and M. F. Ahmed "Groundwater dynamics and arsenic contamination in Bangladesh" Chemical Geology , 2006 , p.112
Klump, S; Kipfer, R; Cirpka, OA; Harvey, CF; Brennwald, MS; Ashfaque, KN; Badruzzaman, ABM; Hug, SJ; Imboden, DM "Groundwater dynamics and arsenic mobilization in Bangladesh assessed using noble gases and tritium" ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY , v.40 , 2006 , p.243 View record at Web of Science 10.1021/es051284
Klump, S., R. Kipfer, O. Cirpka, C. F. Harvey M. S. Brennwald, K. N. Ashfaque, ABM. Badruzzaman, S. Hug and D Imboden "Groundwater Dynamics and Arsenic Mobilization in Bangladesh Assessed Using Noble Gases and Tritium" Environmental Science and Technolog , v.40(1) , 2006 , p.243
M. L. Polizzotto, C. F. Harvey, G. Li, B. Badruzzman, A.Ali, M. Newville, S. Sutton and S. Fendorf, "Solid-phases and desorption processes of arsenic within Bangladesh sediments" Chemical Geology , 2006 , p.97
Neumann, RB; Polizzotto, ML; Badruzzaman, ABM; Ali, MA; Zhang, ZY; Harvey, CF "Hydrology of a groundwater-irrigated rice field in Bangladesh: Seasonal and daily mechanisms of infiltration" WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH , v.45 , 2009 View record at Web of Science 10.1029/2008WR00754
Polizzotto, M. L., C. F. Harvey, S. R. Sutton and S. Fendorf "Processes Conducive to the release and transport of arsenic into aquifers of Bangladesh" Proceedings of the National Academy of Science , v.102(52) , 2005 , p.567
Polizzotto, ML; Harvey, CF; Sutton, SR; Fendorf, S "Processes conducive to the release and transport of arsenic into aquifers of Bangladesh" PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA , v.102 , 2005 , p.18819 View record at Web of Science 10.1073/pna5.050953910
Swartz, CH; Blute, NK; Badruzzman, B; Ali, A; Brabander, D; Jay, J; Besancon, J; Islam, S; Hemond, HF; Harvey, CF "Mobility of arsenic in a Bangladesh aquifer: Inferences from geochemical profiles, leaching data, and mineralogical characterization" GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA , v.68 , 2004 , p.4539 View record at Web of Science 10.1016/j.gca.2004.04.02

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