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Arsenic in Minnesota Groundwater: Occurrence and Geochemical Mobilization Mechanisms. Mindy L. Erickson, Ph.D, P.E. US Geological Survey November 9, 2011 Funding provided by U of MN (CURA and WRC), MDH, and USGS. Why Arsenic? Why Now?.
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Arsenic in Minnesota Groundwater: Occurrence and Geochemical Mobilization Mechanisms Mindy L. Erickson, Ph.D, P.E. US Geological Survey November 9, 2011 Funding provided by U of MN (CURA and WRC), MDH, and USGS
Why Arsenic? Why Now? • At 50 ug/l in drinking water, lifetime cancer risk is about 2 in 100 (similar to second-hand smoke) • MCL change to 10 ug/l affected bout 250 upper Midwest Public Water Systems • Treatment plants for arsenic are expensive • Beginning in 2008, all new MN wells tested for As
Goals • Characterize arsenic occurrence • Characterize arsenic temporal variability • Test potential geochemical mechanisms and geological controls • Provide interested parties with results
Completed Work • Database compilation • Sediment • Geochemistry: metals, organic carbon • Sequential extraction • Scanning electron microscopy • Ground water • Geochemistry: trace elements, arsenic species organic carbon, ammonium • Field parameters: pH, ORP, conductivity, DO, temp • Literature review • Geochemical modeling, statistical analysis
Arsenic Occurrence • Arsenic in rock and sediment at 1 to 100s mg/kg • Crustal average is 1.8 mg/kg • At 1.8 mg/kg, solubilization of <0.1% yields 10 ug/L arsenic in water • Certain geochemical conditions leach arsenic into ground water • Previous study proposed link between Des Moines lobe till and elevated arsenic
Database Compilation • State drinking water agencies/departments • USGS • State geological surveys
Understanding the Geology Northwest provenance late Wisconsin-aged till • Large fraction of fine-grained material • Entrained organics • Active anaerobic biological activity • Reduced conditions
Understanding the Geochemistry • Arsenate (As+5 H2AsO4-, HAsO4-2) • Oxidized form • Adsorbs to metal oxides • Arsenite (As+3 H3AsO3) • Reduced form; more toxic inorganic form • Adsorbs to iron oxides • Organic Arsenic (many forms) • In foods; highest in seafood • Uncommon in groundwater
Understanding the Geochemistry • Arsenic Release Mechanisms • Reductive Desorption • Reductive Dissolution • Anion Competition • Mineral Oxidation (often pyrite)
Understanding the Geochemistry • Northwest provenance sediment has 2 to 26 mg/kg arsenic • Northeast provenance sediment has 1 to 17 mg/kg arsenic • In 9 domestic and monitoring wells in Minnesota, As in sediment is not correlated to As in water
Understanding the Geochemistry • At 1.8 mg/kg arsenic, solubilization of <0.1% yields 10 ug/L arsenic in water • Total sediment arsenic concentration less important than the availability of arsenic • Measured 0.4 - 0.8 mg/kg arsenic adsorbed to/ coprecipitated with metal oxides • Adsorbed/coprecipitated arsenic labile
Summary • Inside the footprint: • Glacial wells are deeper • A higher proportion of wells exceed 10 ug/l As • Glacial and bedrock wells 30 – 90 m deep most affected • Arsenic weakly correlated to iron • Arsenic not correlated to competing anions • Arsenic in ground water is dissolved • Arsenic in ground water is predominantly As(III)
Summary • Elevated arsenic concentrations spatially correlated • Total northwest provenance sediment arsenic not particularly high compared with other regional sediment • Sediment and ground water arsenic not correlated • 0.4 – 0.8 mg/kg labile arsenic present in aquifer sediment • Aquifers are moderately reduced
Conclusions • Late Wisconsin-aged till causes the upper Midwest’s widespread area of elevated arsenic in ground water • Reductive dissolution • Reductive desorption • High-arsenic sediment is not necessary to cause arsenic-impacted ground water • Large but imperfect data sets allow inexpensive observation and characterization of regional environmental problems
Till Sand Well characteristics
Summary and Conclusions • PWS and domestic wells have distinctly different well construction characteristics • PWS well construction coincidentally yields lower arsenic • Coarser aquifers • Larger aquifers • Longer screens • Reductive arsenic mobilization mechanisms active at the till-aquifer interface • Changing routine domestic well drilling practices may yield fewer high-arsenic domestic wells
Goals and Results • Characterize Upper Midwest arsenic occurrence • Northwest provenance late Wisconsin-aged sediment • Bedrock and glacial wells 30-90 m deep • Test potential geochemical mechanisms and geological controls • Reductive mobilization mechanisms • Labile arsenic is present • As(III) predominates • Fe correlation, no competing anion correlation • Well characteristics
Next steps • Micro-to-macro scale look at arsenic occurrence in conjunction with other metals • Assess new well As results • Build and test As prediction model
Questions? Mindy L. Erickson US Geological Survey merickso@usgs.gov 763-783-3231