Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
3423269 
Journal Article 
Controls of evaporative irrigation return flows in comparison to seawater intrusion in coastal karstic aquifers in northern Sri Lanka: Evidence from solutes and stable isotopes 
Chandrajith, R; Diyabalanage, S; Premathilake, KM; Hanke, C; van Geldern, R; Barth, JAC 
2016 
Science of the Total Environment
ISSN: 0048-9697
EISSN: 1879-1026 
548 
421-428 
English 
Groundwater in Miocene karstic aquifers in the Jaffna Peninsula of Sri Lanka is an important resource since no other fresh water sources are available in the region. The subsurface is characterized by highly productive limestone aquifers that are used for drinking and agriculture purposes. A comprehensive hydrogeochemical study was carried out to reveal the processes affecting the groundwater quality in this region. Major and trace element composition and environmental isotope ratios of oxygen and hydrogen (δ(18)OH2O and δ(2)HH2O) were determined in 35 groundwater samples for this investigation. The ion abundance of groundwater in the region was characterized by an anion sequence order with HCO3->Cl->SO4->NO3-. For cations, average Na(+)+K(+) contents in groundwater exceeded those of Ca(2+)+Mg(2+) in most cases. Ionic relationships of major solutes indicated open system calcite dissolution while seawater intrusions are also evident but only close to the coast. The solute contents are enriched by agricultural irrigation returns and associated evaporation. This was confirmed by the stable isotope composition of groundwater that deviated from the local meteoric water line (LMWL) and formed its own regression line denoted as the local evaporation line (LEL). The latter can be described by δ(2)HH2O=5.8×δ(18)OH2O -- 2.9. Increased contents of nitrate-N (up to 5mg/L), sulfate (up to 430mg/L) and fluoride (up to 1.5mg/L) provided evidences for anthropogenic inputs of solutes, most likely from agriculture activities. Among trace elements Ba, Sr, As and Se levels in the Jaffna groundwater were higher compared to that of the dry zone metamorphic aquifers in Sri Lanka. Solute geochemistry and stable isotope evidences from the region indicates that groundwater in the area is mainly derived from local modern precipitation but modified heavily by progressive evaporative concentration rather than seawater intrusion. 
Water stable isotopes; Calcite dissolution; Carbonate aquifers; Irrigation return flows; Groundwater quality; Selenium 
• Nitrate/Nitrite
     Literature Search Update, 1/1/2016 – 12/31/2017
          PubMed
          WoS
     Broad LitSearch 2016/1/1 - 2017/12/5
          Refs found by LitSearch but not ATSDR/IARC
          PubMed
          WoS
     Refs found only by 2017 LitSearch or Citation Mapping
     Ref Types 12/2017
          All Others
• Uranium Toxicological Review
     Date limited literature search 2011-2021
          New to this search
          Scopus