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Influence of hydrostratigraphy and structural setting on the arsenic occurrence in groundwater of the Cimino-Vico volcanic area (central Italy)

TitleInfluence of hydrostratigraphy and structural setting on the arsenic occurrence in groundwater of the Cimino-Vico volcanic area (central Italy)
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsAngelone, Massimo, Cremisini C., Piscopo V., Proposito Marco, and Spaziani Fabio
JournalHydrogeology Journal
Volume17
Issue4
Pagination901-914
Date PublishedJan-06-2009
ISSN14312174
Keywordsaquifer, arsenic, artesian well, Chemical analysis, concentration (composition), Eurasia, Europe, groundwater flow, hydrogeochemistry, Italy, Sampling, Southern Europe, spring water, Stratigraphy, tectonic setting, thermal water, volcano
Abstract

Arsenic occurrence in groundwater near the Cimino-Vico volcanoes (central Italy) was analysed considering the hydrostratigraphy and structural setting and the shallow and deep flows interacting within the Quaternary volcanics. Groundwater is the local source of drinking water. As documented in the past, arsenic in the groundwater has become a problem, and the European maximum allowable contaminant level was recently lowered to 10 μg/L. Chemical analyses of groundwater were conducted, sampled over an area of about 900 km2, from 65 wells and springs representative of the volcanic aquifer and thermal waters. Considering the type of aquifer, the nature of the aquifer formation and its substratum, the hydrochemical data highlight that the arsenic content of the groundwater is mainly connected with the hydrothermal processes in the volcanic area. Thermal waters (54-60°C) fed from deep-rising fluids show higher arsenic concentrations (176-371 μg/L). Cold waters sampled from the volcanic aquifer are characterized by a wide variability in their arsenic concentration (1.6-195 μg/L), and about 62% exceed the limit of 10 μg/L. Where the shallow volcanic aquifer is open to deep-rising thermal fluids, relatively high arsenic concentrations (20-100 μg/L) are found. This occurs close to areas of the more recent volcano-tectonic structures. © Springer-Verlag 2008.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-65749114616&doi=10.1007%2fs10040-008-0401-3&partnerID=40&md5=3e5739dd19684859dc8d662f0c89228b
DOI10.1007/s10040-008-0401-3
Short TitleHydrogeol J
Citation KeyAngelone2009901