Please report any queries concerning the funding data grouped in the
sections named
"Externally Awarded"
or
"Internally Disbursed"
(shown on the profile page) to your Research Finance Administrator.
Your can find your Research Finance Administrator at http://www.ucl.ac.uk/finance/research/post_award/post_award_contacts.php
by entering your department
Please report any queries concerning the student data shown on the
profile page to:
Email: portico-services@ucl.ac.uk
Help Desk: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ras/portico/helpdesk
Email: portico-services@ucl.ac.uk
Help Desk: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ras/portico/helpdesk
Publication Detail
Tracing recharge to aquifers beneath an Asian megacity with Cl/Br and stable isotopes: the example of Dhaka, Bangladesh
-
Publication Type:Journal article
-
Publication Sub Type:Article
-
Authors:Hoque MA, McArthur JM, Sikdar PK, Ball JD, Molla TN
-
Publication date:24/06/2014
-
Journal:Hydrogeology Journal
-
Status:Accepted
-
Keywords:Bangladesh, Cl/Br, Chloride, Urban groundwater, Stable isotopes
-
Publisher URL:
-
Full Text URL:
Abstract
Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, is home to a population of 15 million people, whose water supply is 85% drawn from groundwater in aquifers that underlie the city. Values of Cl/Br >500 are common in groundwater beneath western Dhaka in areas <3 km from the river, and in rivers and sewers around and within the city. The study shows that groundwater beneath western Dhaka is strongly influenced by infiltration of effluent from leaking sewers and unsewered sanitation, and by river-bank infiltration from the Turag-Buriganga river system which bounds the western limit of the city. River-bank infiltration from other rivers around Dhaka is minor. Values of Cl/Br and Cl concentrations reveal that 23 % of wells sampled in Dhaka are influenced by saline connate water in amounts up to 1%. This residual natural salinity compromises the use of electrical conductivity of groundwater as a method for defining pathways of recharge by contaminated surface waters. Concentrations of As, B, Ba, Cd, Cu, F, Ni, NO3, Pb, Sb, Se and U in groundwater samples are less than WHO health-based guideline values for drinking water.
› More
search options
UCL Researchers