4.7 Article

Hydrochemical characteristics and health risk assessment of groundwater in karst areas of southwest China: A case study of Bama, Guangxi

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 341, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2022.130872

Keywords

Karst areas of southwest China; Hydrochemical characteristics; Water quality; Human health risk

Funding

  1. Basic Research Project of Infinitus (China) Company Ltd [ZAT2020W02]
  2. China Scholarship Council [201708420145]

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This study conducted a comparative analysis of groundwater in Bama, a typical karst area in southwest China. The results showed differences in hydrochemical characteristics and water quality between the exposed karst region (EKR) and buried karst region (BKR). The water quality in EKR was more influenced by human activities. The study recommends reducing anthropogenic pollution and developing clean production plans to promote sustainable economic development in the area.
The southwest karst area is considered to have the most vulnerable groundwater environment in China. Groundwater quality is an important factor restricting sustainable economic development. In this study, traditional water chemistry method, water quality index (WQI), and hazard index (HI) were applied to comparatively analyze the hydrochemical characteristics of groundwater and the water quality in the exposed karst region (EKR) and buried karst region (BKR) in Bama, a typical karst area in southwest China. Generally, the main water type was Ca/Mg-HCO3. Due to the predominance of dissolution of carbonate rocks in EKR and silicate rocks in BKR, higher total dissolved solids (TDS), Ca and HCO3- concentrations, and lower H2SiO3 content were detected in groundwater in EKR compared with BKR. As affected by weathering of rocks such as lead-zinc ore, the maximum concentrations of Zn and Sr were 11.23 mg/L and 13.30 mg/L, showing that mineral water resources are widely distributed in Bama. The ion ratios and isotope abundances (delta D and delta O-18) in groundwater samples indicated stronger evaporation and rock-water interaction in EKR than BKR. Human activities exerted a more significant influence on the water quality in EKR compared to BKR. The mean WQI value also suggested that the groundwater quality was better in BKR (9.56) than EKR (12.17). Although 95.7% of the water samples in the study area were classified as excellent based on their WQI values, 4.3% of the water samples still had significant health risks (HI > 1) due to the high Sb, Zn, As, and Sr concentrations. It is recommended to reduce anthropogenic pollution in EKR and develop a plan for clean production of mineral water industry according to local conditions, which will help the sustainable development of the local economy.

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