Impacts of human activity modes and climate on heavy metal "spread" in groundwater are biased.

Chemosphere

School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, 639798, Singapore; Department of River, Yangtze River Scientific Research Institute, Wuhan 430010, China.

Published: June 2016

Groundwater quality deterioration has attracted world-wide concerns due to its importance for human water supply. Although more and more studies have shown that human activities and climate are changing the groundwater status, an investigation on how different groundwater heavy metals respond to human activity modes (e.g. mining, waste disposal, agriculture, sewage effluent and complex activity) in a varying climate has been lacking. Here, for each of six heavy metals (i.e. Fe, Zn, Mn, Pb, Cd and Cu) in groundwater, we use >330 data points together with mixed-effect models to indicate that (i) human activity modes significantly influence the Cu and Mn but not Zn, Fe, Pb and Cd levels, and (ii) annual mean temperature (AMT) only significantly influences Cu and Pb levels, while annual precipitation (AP) only significantly affects Fe, Cu and Mn levels. Given these differences, we suggest that the impacts of human activity modes and climate on heavy metal "spread" in groundwater are biased.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2016.03.046DOI Listing

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