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Chemical extraction results of aquifer sediments for concentrations of iron and arsenic in different redox zones at the crude-oil spill site near Bemidji, Minnesota

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2011
Time Period
2012
Time Period
2013
Time Period
2014

Citation

Ziegler, B.A., Schreiber, M.E., and Cozzarelli, I.M., 2017, Chemical extraction results of aquifer sediments for concentrations of iron and arsenic in different redox zones at the crude-oil spill site near Bemidji, Minnesota: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/F7K35RWK.

Summary

In a crude-oil-contaminated sandy aquifer at the Bemidji site in northern Minnesota, biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons has resulted in release of naturally occurring As to groundwater under Fe-reducing conditions. This data set was collected for a study that used chemical extractions of aquifer sediments collected in 1993 and 2011-2014 to evaluate the relationship between Fe and As in different redox zones (oxic, methanogenic, Fe-reducing, anoxic-sub-oxic transition) of the contaminated aquifer over a twenty year period. The data presented showed that 1) the aquifer has the capacity to naturally attenuate the plume of dissolved As, primarily through sorption; 2) Fe and As are linearly correlated in sediment across all redox [...]

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Extraction results table rev.xlsx 26.98 KB application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet

Purpose

Using results of these data coupled with historical data, we develop a conceptual model which summarizes the natural attenuation of As and Fe over time and space in this contaminated aquifer that can be applied to other sites that experience As mobilization due to an influx of bioavailable organic matter.

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Communities

  • National Crude Oil Spill Fate and Natural Attenuation Research Site

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/F7K35RWK

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