Abstract

Pollution of urban groundwater is routinely reported but the profile of contamination with depth in urban aquifers is rarely resolved. This limits understanding of the depth of penetration of urban recharge and contaminants, and use of urban groundwater. Penetration of anthropogenic solutes (major ions, trace metals) in Permo-Triassic sandstone aquifers underlying two mature conurbations in the UK was investigated through depth-specific, groundwater sampling of dedicated multilevel piezometers. Identification of solute origin and biogeochemical processes (e.g. denitrification, mineral dissolution) was aided by use of stable isotope ratios ( 34S/ 32S, 18O/ 16O, 15N/ 14N, 13C/ 12C) and chemical speciation modelling (PHREEQC). Depth profiles of aquifer hydrochemistry reveal penetration of anthropogenic solutes to depths of between 30 and 47 m below ground in the unconfined sandstone and confirm the contributions of faecal and industrial effluents to urban recharge. They also highlight the complexity of solute loading and difficulty resolving solute origin from the range of potential sources in urban groundwater. Faecally-derived NO 3 is the most pervasive contaminant exceeding drinking-water quality guidelines and is associated with elevated concentrations of B and SO 4. Elevated concentrations of Li, B, Cr and Co are observed at depth in groundwater contaminated by long-term industrial land use (metalworking). Observed penetration of anthropogenic solutes in the unconfined sandstone is consistent with post-development recharge of urban groundwater (residence times <230 a) indicated by flow modelling, and suggests tentatively that urban abstraction to depths of up to 50 m below ground in the unconfined Permo-Triassic sandstone is required to scavenge contaminated groundwater.

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