4.5 Article

Identification of the hydrogeochemical processes in groundwater using major ion chemistry: a case study of Penna-Chitravathi river basins in Southern India

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 170, Issue 1-4, Pages 365-382

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-009-1239-4

Keywords

Penna-Chitravathi rivers; Anantapur; Hydrogeochemstry; Pre- and post-monsoon; Evapotranspiration; Water-rock interaction

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Hydrogeochemical studies were carried out in the Penna-Chitravathi river basins to identify and delineate the important geochemical processes which were responsible for the evolution of chemical composition of groundwater. The area is underlain by peninsular gneissic complex of Archaean age, Proterozoic meta-sediments, and strip of river alluvium. Groundwater samples were collected covering all the major hydrogeological environs in pre- and post-monsoon seasons. The samples were analyzed for major constituents such as Ca(2 +) , Mg(2 +) , Na (+) , K (+) , CO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand), HCO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand), Cl (-aEuro parts per thousand), SO(2) (-aEuro parts per thousand 4), NO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand), and F (-aEuro parts per thousand). The groundwater in general is of Na (+) -Cl (-aEuro parts per thousand), Na (+) -HCO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand), Ca(2 +) -Mg(2 +) -HCO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand), and Ca(2 +) -Mg(2 +) -Cl (-aEuro parts per thousand) types. Na (+) among cations and Cl (-aEuro parts per thousand) and/or HCO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand) among anions dominate the water; Na (+) and Ca(2 +) are in the transitional state with Na (+) replacing Ca(2 +) and HCO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand) Cl (-aEuro parts per thousand) due to physiochemical changes in the aquifer and water-rock interactions. The Ca(2 +) -Mg(2 +) -Cl (-aEuro parts per thousand) HCO(3) (-aEuro parts per thousand) type water in one third samples suggest that ion exchange and dissolution processes are responsible for its origin. Change in storage of aquifer in a season does not influence the major geochemical makeup of groundwater. Gibbs plots indicate that the evolution of water chemistry is influenced by water-rock interaction followed by evapotranspiration process. The aquifer material mineralogy together with semiarid climate, poor drainage system, and low precipitation factors played major role in controlling groundwater quality of the area.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available