Ortega-Guerrero Adrián
Centro de Geociencias, Campus Juriquilla, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Blvd. Juriquilla No. 3001., Querétaro, QRO, Mexico.
Environ Geochem Health. 2017 Oct;39(5):987-1003. doi: 10.1007/s10653-016-9866-5. Epub 2016 Aug 18.
High arsenic concentrations in groundwater have been documented in La Laguna Region (LLR) in arid northern Mexico, where arsenic poisoning is both chronic and endemic. A heated debate has continued for decades on its origin. LLR consisted of a series of ancient connected lakes that developed at the end of a topographic depression under closed basin conditions. This study addresses the isotopic, chemical composition of the groundwater and geochemical modeling in the southeasternmost part of the LLR to determine the origin of arsenic. Groundwater samples were obtained from a carbonate and granular aquifers and from a clayey aquitard at terminal Viesca Lake. Results show that groundwater originated as meteoric water that reached the lakes mainly via abundant springs in the carbonate aquifer and perennial flooding of the Nazas-Aguanaval Rivers. Paleo-lake water underwent progressive evaporation as demonstrated by the enrichment of δO, δH and characteristic geochemical patterns in the granular aquifer and aquitard that resulted in highly saline (>90,000 mS/cm), arsenic-rich (up to 5000 μg/L) paleo-groundwater (>30,000 years BP). However, adsorption or co-precipitation on iron oxides, clay-mineral surfaces and organic carbon limited arsenic concentration in the groundwater. Arsenic-rich groundwater and other solutes are advancing progressively from the lacustrine margins toward the main granular aquifer, due to reversal of hydraulic gradients caused by intensive groundwater exploitation and the reduction in freshwater runoff provoked by dam construction on the main rivers. Desorption of arsenic will incorporate additional concentrations of arsenic into the groundwater and continue to have significant negative effects on human health and the environment.
在墨西哥北部干旱地区的拉古纳地区(LLR),地下水中砷含量极高,砷中毒在这里既是慢性病又是地方病。关于其来源的激烈争论已经持续了数十年。LLR由一系列古老的相连湖泊组成,这些湖泊是在封闭盆地条件下的地形凹陷末端形成的。本研究针对LLR最东南部地区的地下水同位素、化学成分以及地球化学模型展开,以确定砷的来源。地下水样本取自碳酸盐岩和颗粒含水层以及维埃斯卡湖末端的黏土质隔水层。结果表明,地下水起源于大气降水,主要通过碳酸盐含水层中的大量泉水以及纳萨斯 - 阿瓜纳瓦尔河的常年洪水流入湖泊。古湖水经历了渐进式蒸发,这在颗粒含水层和隔水层中δO、δH的富集以及特征性地球化学模式中得到体现,从而形成了高盐度(>90,000 mS/cm)、高砷含量(高达5000 μg/L)的古地下水(>30,000年BP)。然而,铁氧化物、黏土矿物表面和有机碳上的吸附或共沉淀作用限制了地下水中的砷浓度。由于密集的地下水开采导致水力梯度逆转,以及主要河流上修建水坝引发淡水径流减少,富含砷的地下水和其他溶质正从湖岸逐渐向主要颗粒含水层推进。砷的解吸将使地下水中砷浓度进一步升高,并继续对人类健康和环境产生重大负面影响。