Geochemical characterization of groundwater and source apportionment of potential pollutants in a tribal stretch infected with chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology.

Chemosphere

Central Ground Water Board, North Central Chhattisgarh Region, Ministry of Jal Shakti, Govt. of India, LK Corporates Tower, Dumartarai, Dhamtari Road, Raipur, 492015, India.

Published: March 2025

This paper draws world attention toward a tribal stretch in central India exposed to chronic kidney disease of unknown etiology (CKDu). To date, about 100 people have died and more than 300 hospitalized from a single village, Supebeda, of 1200 inhabitants. The occurrence of CKDu in this part of the world is a recent discovery and its potential pollutants are still eluding human understanding. Since groundwater is being accused as the culprit, this contribution attempts to characterize the area geochemically, study major rock-water interactions, identify potential pollutants, and apportion their sources. Analytical results of 27 groundwater samples reveal that the area suffers from NO (0-128.3 mg/L) and F (0-1.9 mg/L) contamination with total hardness, Ca, Mg, and Cl as other violator parameters. Comprehensive Water Quality Index classifies ∼52% of the samples as potable; ∼37% could be suitable for drinking pending certain treatment. While elevated F concentrations are due to the weathering of fluoride-bearing minerals (fluorite, amphiboles, biotite, hornblende, granite gneiss, etc.), the excess Ca and Mg ions are attributed to 63% of the samples exhibiting cation exchange processes (Ca, Mg, Cl < Na + K) resulting from the weathering of carbonate (calcite, dolomite), anhydrite, gypsum, calc-silicate (anorthite, plagioclase, amphiboles) and ferromagnesian (hornblende, biotite) minerals in the metamorphic rocks. About 22% of the samples depict reverse ion exchange processes (Ca, Mg, Cl > Na + K) due to silicate weathering including dissolution of Cl salts (albite and halite minerals) and anthropogenic inputs that also contribute to elevated concentrations of NO.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2025.144272DOI Listing

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