4.0 Article

Natural attenuation: A feasible approach to remediation of ground water pollution at landfills?

Journal

GROUND WATER MONITORING AND REMEDIATION
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages 69-77

Publisher

GROUND WATER PUBLISHING CO
DOI: 10.1111/j.1745-6592.2000.tb00253.x

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Remediation of ground water pollution at old landfills with no engineered leachate collection system is a demanding and costly operation. It requires control of the landfill body, since the majority of the pollutants are still present in the landfilled waste for decades after the site has been closed. However, natural attenuation of the plume without removing the source is an attractive approach to managing leachate plumes. Natural attenuation has been implemented for petroleum hydrocarbon plumes and for chlorinated solvent plumes, primarily in the United States. Natural attenuation has not yet gained a foothold with respect to leachate plumes, however. Based on the experiences gained from 10 years of research on two Danish landfills, it is suggested that natural attenuation is a feasible approach but is more complicated and demanding than in the case of petroleum hydrocarbons and chlorinated solvent.

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