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Recommended Sampling Intervals for Arsenic in Private Wells
Authors:Brian J Mailloux  Nicholas A Procopio  Mark Bakker  Therese Chen  Imtiaz Choudhury  Kazi Matin Ahmed  M Rajib H Mozumder  Tyler Ellis  Steve Chillrud  Alexander van Geen
Institution:1. New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Division of Science and Research, Trenton, NJ, 08064 USA;2. Water Management Department, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands;3. Environmental Science Department, Barnard College, NY, New York, 10027 USA;4. Department of Geology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh;5. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Palisades, NY, 10964 USA
Abstract:Geogenic arsenic in drinking water is a worldwide problem. For private well owners, testing (e.g., private or government laboratory) is the main method to determine arsenic concentration. However, the temporal variability of arsenic concentrations is not well characterized and it is not clear how often private wells should be tested. To answer this question, three datasets, two new and one publicly available, with temporal arsenic data were utilized: 6370 private wells from New Jersey tested at least twice since 2002, 2174 wells from the USGS NAWQA database, and 391 private wells sampled 14 years apart from Bangladesh. Two arsenic drinking water standards are used for the analysis: 10 µg/L, the WHO guideline and EPA standard or maximum contaminant level (MCL) and 5 µg/L, the New Jersey MCL. A rate of change was determined for each well and these rates were used to predict the temporal change in arsenic for a range of initial arsenic concentrations below an MCL. For each MCL and initial concentration, the probability of exceeding an MCL over time was predicted. Results show that to limit a person to below a 5% chance of drinking water above an MCL, wells that are ½ an MCL and above should be tested every year and wells below ½ an MCL should be tested every 5 years. These results indicate that one test result below an MCL is inadequate to ensure long-term compliance. Future recommendations should account for temporal variability when creating drinking water standards and guidance for private well owners.
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