OR/15/009 Appendix: Difference between revisions
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| Widespread contamination by nitrate and FC linked to poor sanitation and well construction | | Widespread contamination by nitrate and FC linked to poor sanitation and well construction | ||
| Gélinas et al. (1996) | | Gélinas et al. (1996) | ||
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| 2Various.<br>Ivory coast | | 2Various.<br>Ivory coast | ||
| Basement | | Basement | ||
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| High nitrate (up to 200 mg/L) linked to domestic pollution and deforestation | | High nitrate (up to 200 mg/L) linked to domestic pollution and deforestation | ||
| Faillat (1990) | | Faillat (1990) | ||
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| 2Bolama City, Guinea Bissau, | | 2Bolama City, Guinea Bissau, | ||
| Sandy soils and Cenozoic–Modern sediments | | Sandy soils and Cenozoic–Modern sediments | ||
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| 80% of wells contaminated with FC linked to widespread use of PL | | 80% of wells contaminated with FC linked to widespread use of PL | ||
| [file:///W:/PP/GraphicCommunications/Graphic%20Design/Live_Jobs/2014%20Reports/2015/15009/OR15009.docx#_bookmark8 Bordalo and Savva-] Bordalo (2007) | | [file:///W:/PP/GraphicCommunications/Graphic%20Design/Live_Jobs/2014%20Reports/2015/15009/OR15009.docx#_bookmark8 Bordalo and Savva-] Bordalo (2007) | ||
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| 2Cotonou, Benin | | 2Cotonou, Benin | ||
| Quaternary to mid Pleistocene sandstone | | Quaternary to mid Pleistocene sandstone | ||
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| High P and K concentrations in upper aquifers linked to anthropogenic pollution | | High P and K concentrations in upper aquifers linked to anthropogenic pollution | ||
| Boukari et al. (1996) | | Boukari et al. (1996) | ||
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| 1Kumasi, Ghana | | 1Kumasi, Ghana | ||
| Precambrian Basement | | Precambrian Basement | ||
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| Water quality survey showed that water quality parameters were within WHO drinking water guideline values | | Water quality survey showed that water quality parameters were within WHO drinking water guideline values | ||
| Nkansah et al. (2010) | | Nkansah et al. (2010) | ||
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| 3Kumasi, Ghana | | 3Kumasi, Ghana | ||
| Precambrian Basement | | Precambrian Basement | ||
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| Poor quality overall, contamination linked to proximity to PL and refuse tips as well as livestock | | Poor quality overall, contamination linked to proximity to PL and refuse tips as well as livestock | ||
| Obiri-Danso et al. (2009) | | Obiri-Danso et al. (2009) | ||
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| 3Ilesha, Nigeria | | 3Ilesha, Nigeria | ||
| Basement | | Basement | ||
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| Evidence of anthropogenic impact on water quality degradation using PCA | | Evidence of anthropogenic impact on water quality degradation using PCA | ||
| Malomo et al. (1990) | | Malomo et al. (1990) | ||
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| 1Benin City, Nigeria | |||
| Quaternary to mid Pleistocene sandstone | |||
| Boreholes and open wells (6) | |||
| Pb 0.03-0.25<br>Zn 0.98-7.19<br>Cr 0.02-1.1<br>Cd Nd-0.23<br>FC 4600-240000<br>FS 600-35000 | |||
| Single survey | |||
| Elevated Pb, Cr, Cd and Zn attributed to indiscriminate waste disposal and FC occurrence linked to PL, soak- always and septic tanks | |||
| Erah and Akujieze (2002) | |||
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| 2Calabar, Nigeria | |||
| Tertiary to recent sands and gravels | |||
| Existing wells (20) | |||
| BOD 0.06-4.09, mean 1.72<br>N 0.09-3.5, mean 2.15<br>Cl 0.1-1, mean 0.45<br>FC 0.75-4.32, mean 1.86 | |||
| N/A | |||
| FC, nitrate and Cl had a positive correlation with urbanisation | |||
| Eni et al. (2011) | |||
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| 1Ibadan, Nigeria | |||
| Basement, banded gneiss and schist | |||
| Existing wells (N/A) | |||
| TSS 159-186.6, mean 174<br>Cl 1.1-10, mean 5<br>TC 2300-9200, mean 5120 | |||
| Dry season | |||
| Gross pollution of groundwater attributed to poor well construction, PL and waste management | |||
| Ochieng et al. (2011) | |||
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| 2Ibogun, Pakoto, Ifo, Ogun State, Nigeria | |||
| Cambrian basement geology and weathered regolith | |||
| Dug wells, communities of 5000-20,000 people (20) | |||
| TDS 100-2200<br>TH 6-246<br>NO3 0.8-88<br>TC 0-0.6 (cfu x105)<br>FC 0-0.2 (cfu x105)<br>FS 0-0.7 (cfu x105) | |||
| July-August 2009 | |||
| Water quality standards for nitrate, FC, FS not met for significant proportion of wells | |||
| Adelekan (2010) | |||
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| 1Lagos, Nigeria | |||
| Alluvium over sedimentary | |||
| Urban wells (18) | |||
| TDS 79-1343, mean 514<br>TH 24-289, mean 110<br>Na 8-274, mean 79<br>NO3 0.05-1.51, mean 0.4<br>Pb 0-1.9, mean 1.6<br>Zn 0-4.2 mean 0.3 | |||
| Survey August to October 2004 | |||
| Sources of contamination included sanitation, textiles, pharmaceuticals, food, tanneries, motor industry | |||
| Yusuf (2007) | |||
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| 1Surulere, Lagos, Nigeria | |||
| Alluvium over sedimentary | |||
| Wells and boreholes in a middle class area (49) | |||
| Al 1-99 µg/L<br>Cd 1-98 µg/L<br>Pb 1-24 µg/L | |||
| July 2009 | |||
| Pb and Cd above WHO drinking water standards in >30% of sites | |||
| Momodu and Anyakora (2010) | |||
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| 1Abeokuta, Nigeria | |||
| Basement igneous and metamorphic | |||
| Shallow wells including sanitary survey (40) | |||
| colspan="2" | All bacterial count>20 Maximum 800 EC+PA+SAL | |||
| December 2005 | |||
| Shallow groundwater is highly contaminated with bacteria. Sources include pit latrines, livestock and solid waste | |||
| Olabisi et al. (2008) | |||
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| 2Abeokuta, Nigeria, urban & peri-urban | |||
| Basement igneous and metamorphic | |||
| Shallow wells (76) | |||
| '''Urban '''<br>(mean) TDS 402<br>TH 30.3<br>NO3 12.02<br>PO4 0.21<br>Pb 0.25<br>Zn 0.12<br>TC 10500 | |||
| '''Peri-urban '''<br>(mean) TDS 263<br>TH 31.7<br>NO3 10.7<br>PO4 0.03<br>Pb 0.19<br>Zn 0.09<br>TC 10000 | |||
| Dry season | |||
| Mean values for Pb, nitrate EC and TC > WHO standards. Trading, textiles, transport, cottage industries, pit latrines Generally higher in dry season | |||
| Orebiyi et al. (2010) | |||
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| 1Peri-urban area, Abeokuta, Nigeria | |||
| Basement igneous and metamorphic | |||
| Hand-dug wells (25) | |||
| colspan="2" | TDS 50-270, mean 163<br>NO3 2.97-40.7, mean 17.6<br>NH4 0-0.59, mean 0.11<br>PO4 12-86 µg/L , mean 46<br>TH 12-210 , mean 106 | |||
| Rainy season 2008 | |||
| Direct surface run off into wells is suggested as possible contamination source | |||
| Taiwo et al. (2011) | |||
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| 1Warri River plain, Delta, Nigeria | |||
| Alluvial Benin formation | |||
| Boreholes near WW treatment plant | |||
| colspan="2" | TDS 16-81<br>COD 0.4-44.4<br>NO3 0.3-1.2<br>Fe 0.05-0.15 | |||
| 2 year sampling campaign | |||
| River infiltration, municipal wastewater, agriculture, oil industry | |||
| Ibe and Agbamu (1999) | |||
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| 1Warri River plain, Delta, Nigeria | |||
| Quaternary and older sedimentary sequences | |||
| Dug wells | |||
| colspan="2" | Fe 0.32-2.75<br>Pb 0.058-0.443<br>Ni 0.008-0.188<br>V 0-4<br>Cr 0-9<br>Cd 0.75-8.5<br>Zn 0-1.8 | |||
| N/A | |||
| Pb, Ni exceed WHO standards. Sources include Warri River, settlement, refinery. Highest values in village 3 km from refinery | |||
| Aremu et al. (2002) | |||
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| 1Masaka, Nigeria | |||
| Cretaceous sandstone and clay | |||
| Dug wells, high density (12) | |||
| TDS 528-935<br>NO3 44.5-92.5<br>Alk 67-179<br>Cl 41-118<br>Fe 0.085-0.199<br>Cr 0.005-0.0126<br>TC 25900-78400 | |||
| Samples taken in wet season | |||
| WHO standards exceeded for a range of contaminants including nitrate, TDS, Cr, Cd and TC. High density settlement with shallow water table | |||
| Alhassan and Ujoh (2011) | |||
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| 2Yaounde, Cameroon | |||
| Basement | |||
| Springs and wells in high density area (> 40) | |||
| SEC 18.2-430, mean 87<br>FC 60% >100<br>FS 5%>100 | |||
| One-off survey | |||
| Groundwater’s in high density zones show significant degradation (chemical and microbiological), linked to PL | |||
| Ewodo et al. (2009) | |||
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| 2Douala, Cameroon | |||
| Alluvium over Pliocene sand and gravel | |||
| Springs , wells and boreholes (72) | |||
| SEC 25-362<br>NO3 0.21-94.3<br>FC 0-2311 | |||
| One-off survey | |||
| High levels of FS indicative of contamination from PL, related to age and density of settlement | |||
| Takem et al. (2010) | |||
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| 2Kinshasa, DR Congo | |||
| Alluvial and sedimentary sequences | |||
| Wells including sanitary survey | |||
| '''Dry season'''<br>TDS 180-450<br>NO3 76-118<br>PO4 0.53-4.6<br>TH 110-149<br>Pb 0.04-0.09<br>Cd 0.13-0.20 | |||
| '''Wet season'''<br>TDS 200-710<br>NO3 97-198<br>PO4 3.6-14.6<br>TH 17-52.5 | |||
| Latrines, metal works, solid waste dumps are main sources of contamination | |||
| Vala et al. (2011) | |||
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| 2Dakar, Senegal | |||
| Quaternary | |||
| Wells (56) | |||
| NO3 0-122 | |||
| July-October 1997 | |||
| Nitrate contamination from point-source seepage in urban areas | |||
| Cissé Faye et al. (2004) | |||
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| 2Mekelle, Ethiopia | |||
| Mesozoic sediments | |||
| Wells, springs and boreholes (100) | |||
| SEC 542-5300<br>TDS 330-3454<br>NH4 0.01-2.38<br>NO3 0.21-336<br>Cl 5.76-298<br>F 0-1.27, PO4 0.001-0.58 | |||
| N/A | |||
| Highly variable water quality indicative of a range of redox zones and sources of contamination | |||
| Berhane and Walraevens (2013) | |||
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| 2Bahir Dar, Ethiopia | |||
| Weathered and fractured Alkaline Basalt | |||
| Dug wells and protected pumps in inner, middle and outer zones (8) | |||
| '''Middle and inner city'''<br>TDS 20-600<br>NO3 0.18-57.2<br>NH4 0-12<br>Cl 46-270<br>FC 93% of sites<br>Mean 1.5 log cfu<br>EC 80% sites mean<br>1.4 log cfu | |||
| '''Outer city'''<br>TDS 20-70<br>NO3 0.08-8.8<br>NH4 0-12<br>Cl 0-40 | |||
| Sampling over a 5 month period 2006/2007 | |||
| Groundwater contamination linked to population density and urbanisation. All dug wells and boreholes had microbiological contamination in excess of WHO/EU standards. Dug wells had significantly higher FC. | |||
| Vala et al. (2011) | |||
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| 1Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | |||
| Volcanics | |||
| Boreholes and springs (9) | |||
| colspan="2" | Alk 8-41<br>NO3 0.72-35<br>NO2 <0.01<br>COD 6.8-41<br>Cl 6.8-28<br>PO4 <0.03-0.1<br>Pb 4.6-25<br>SEC 300-1200<br>TC 0-34000 | |||
| Various | |||
| The authors made a link between the surface water quality and groundwater quality. Major sources of contamination inferred were domestic waste, and industrial pollution from textile industry and petrol stations | |||
| Abiye (2008) | |||
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| 1Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | |||
| Volcanics | |||
| Springs and boreholes (10) | |||
| colspan="2" | Zn 0.87-146<br>Ni 0.31-0.98<br>Cu 0.44-1.82<br>Pb 4.3-56.2<br>Cd <0.1-0.2<br>Co <0.1-0.12 | |||
| 2002 | |||
| Geogenic sources of heavy metals is the likely sources of groundwater contamination in this setting due to high heavy metal concentrations in soils and rocks | |||
| Alemayehu (2006) Goshu and Akoma (2011) Goshu et al. (2010) | |||
|- | |||
| 1Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | |||
| Volcanics | |||
| Springs and wells (63) | |||
| colspan="2" | Ni 2-152 µg/L<br>Pb <1<br>Co 0.5-165<br>As <3<br>Zn <20-2100<br>Cu 1.5-164<br>Cd 0.3-12.3<br>Cr 18.2-214 | |||
| Februrary-March 2004, July to September 2005 | |||
| Urban area, leaching from polluted soils. | |||
| Demlie and Wohnlich (2006) | |||
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| 3Kisumu, Kenya (urban) | |||
| Sedimentary | |||
| Existing wells (191) | |||
| colspan="2" | TTC 0->100k mean 894<br>NO3 0.06-45 mean 15<br>Cl 0-225 mean 796<br>F 3-29.6 mean 6.2 | |||
| 1998 and 2004 | |||
| Density of PL within a 100 m radius was significantly correlated with nitrate and Cl but not FC (''PC'') | |||
| Wright et al. (2013) | |||
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| 2Lichinga, Mozambique and Timbuktu, Mali | |||
| Quaternary/ Basement gneiss-granite complex | |||
| Hand dug wells: Timbuktu(31), Lichinga (159) | |||
| '''Timbuktu'''<br>SEC 221-2010<br>NO3-N 35 med<br>Cl 500 | |||
| '''Lichinga'''<br>SEC 220<br>med NO3 5.6<br>med<br>Cl 13.5 | |||
| Timbuktu September 2002 to May 2003 Lichinga, April 2002-August 2004 | |||
| Contamination of groundwater sources from on site sanitation traced using N:Cl | |||
| Cronin et al. (2007) | |||
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| 3Lichinga, Mozambique | |||
| Mudstone | |||
| Lichinga (25) | |||
| colspan="2" | TTC, EF (Enterococi) | |||
| Monthly for 1 year | |||
| Higher risk at onset of the wet season and end of the dry season. Predominant source was from animal faeces rather than PL or septic tanks. (''LR'') | |||
| Godfrey et al. (2006) | |||
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| 2Kampala, Uganda | |||
| Weathered Basement | |||
| Wells and springs | |||
| '''High density '''<br>NO3 mean 67<br>Cl mean 59<br>TC mean 14 | |||
| '''Low density '''<br>NO3 mean 22<br>Cl mean 21<br>TC mean 544 | |||
| Contrasting hydrological conditions | |||
| Significantly higher contamination in high density regions compared to low density | |||
| Barrett et al. (1998) | |||
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| 3Kampala, Uganda | |||
| Weathered Basement | |||
| Springs (25) | |||
| colspan="2" | TtC (FC)<br>FS BLD-23000 | |||
| Monthly between September 1998-March 1999 | |||
| Evidence of rapid recharge to springs following rainfall. Local environment hygiene and improved sanitary completion shown to be more important than on-site sanitation for spring protection (''LR'') | |||
| Howard et al. (2003) | |||
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| 3Kampala, Uganda | |||
| Weathered Basement | |||
| Monitoring wells (16) | |||
| '''Dry season '''<br>SEC 272-345<br>P BDL-0.11<br>N BDL-5.5<br>NO3 24-144<br>Cl 31-50.5<br>TC 0-131<br>FC 0-35 | |||
| '''Wet Season'''<br>SEC 280-372<br>P BDL0.04<br>N BDL-263<br>NO3 24-692<br>Cl 28-192<br>TC 29-10000<br>FC 6-8300 | |||
| 2003: weekly March-May and September in dry season, and June to August, wet season. | |||
| High population density with pit latrines and livestock sources identified. Microbiological water quality deterioration after heavy rainfall | |||
| Barrett et al. (1998) | |||
|- | |||
| 1Kampala, Uganda | |||
| Weathered Basement | |||
| Boreholes and wells (28) | |||
| colspan="2" | Limited inorganic and organic suit, no microbiology | |||
| September and October 2011 | |||
| Nitrate concentrations suggest poor sanitation and diffuse contamination. | |||
| Nachiyunde, Kabunga et al. (2013) | |||
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| 3Uganda, Kampala (urban) | |||
| Weathered basement | |||
| Piezometers (10) | |||
| colspan="2" | 1.5 m down gradient of pit latrines<br>NO3 5-90<br>Cl 50-1100<br>PO40.1-2<br>NH4 5-40 | |||
| March-August 2010 biweekly sampling | |||
| PL found to be a significant source of nutrients (N) compared to waste dump. NH4 removal by nitrification | |||
| Nyenje et al. (2013) | |||
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| 1Lusaka, Zambia | |||
| Dolomite | |||
| Wells and streams in intensely urbanised area (9) | |||
| colspan="2" | SEC 200-710<br>NO3 <0.1-43<br>NH4 <0.25-3.5, Cl 4.6-36<br>PO4 <0.1-4, B <1-10, As <0.2-0.49<br>Pb 0.14-0.67, Hg <0.4-13 | |||
| July 2001 | |||
| Values for nitrate and Hg were in excess of WHO standards on some occasions. Poor sanitation and solid waste disposal implicated. | |||
| Cidu et al. (2003) | |||
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| 2Lusaka, Zambia | |||
| Dolomite | |||
| Boreholes (7) | |||
| colspan="2" | FC 0-45<br>TC 0-58<br>SEC 401-1060 | |||
| Single survey | |||
| Evidence for contamination in health centre boreholes by FC, poor waste management implicated | |||
| Nkhuwa (2008) | |||
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| 3Lusaka,Zambia | |||
| Dolomite | |||
| Private and public boreholes (N/A) | |||
| colspan="2" | Alk 124-564, NO3 0.03-39,<br>NO2 0.002-42, NH4 0.08-60<br>Cl 42-102, TC 1-TNTC<br>FC 21-TNTC, BOD 2-69<br>COD 9-320 | |||
| Various: 1995-2000 | |||
| Hydrochem, microbiology and incidence of cholera outbreaks compiled to show the rapid deterioration of GW sources associated with poor sanitation | |||
| Nkhuwa (2003) | |||
|-valign="top" | |||
| 2Ndola, Zambia | |||
| Dolomite and basement lithologies | |||
| Wells (123) and boreholes (60) surface waters (41) | |||
| '''Wells (median)'''<br>TC 7<br>Zn 11.4 | |||
| '''Boreholes (med)'''<br>TC 0<br>Zn 139 | |||
| April-June 2013 | |||
| Geological control on trace metal contamination. TC for wells>boreholes but no FC data collected. | |||
| Liddle et al (2015) | |||
|-valign="top" | |||
| 3Kabwe, Zambia | |||
| Dolomite and basement | |||
| Private (13) and public (12) boreholes, private wells (57) | |||
| '''Dry season'''<br>''Wells''<br>NO3 0.1-187<br>(18)<br>FC 10-6800<br>(180)<br>Boreholes NO3 0.1-38 (6)<br>FC <2-28 (<2) | |||
| '''Wet season'''<br>''Wells''<br>NO3 0.15-174(22)<br>FC 2-27600<br>(570)<br>Boreholes NO3 0.1-41 (6)<br>FC <2-760 (<2) | |||
| Dry and wet season 2013-2014 | |||
| Widespread NO3 and FC contamination in shallow wells in both wet and dry seasons, wet>>dry. Generally good quality in peri-urban boreholes but evidence of contamination in some urban boreholes | |||
| Lapworth et al (2015) | |||
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| 3South Lunzu, Blantyre, Malawi | |||
| Weathered basement | |||
| Borehole, springs and dug well (9) | |||
| '''Dry season'''<br>SEC 210-330<br>Cl 21-35<br>Fe 0.1-0.8<br>FC 0-5200<br>FS 0-640 | |||
| '''Wet season'''<br>SEC 306-383<br>Cl 14-29<br>Fe 0.4-0.7<br>FC 0-11,000<br>FS 0-7000 | |||
| Wet and dry season on two occasions | |||
| Groundwaters highly contaminated due to poor sanitation and domestic waste disposal. 58% of residence use traditional PL | |||
| Palamuleni (2002) | |||
|-valign="top" | |||
| 3Southern Malawi | |||
| Weathered basement | |||
| Shallow wells (26) | |||
| '''Dry season'''<br>NO3 0-2.6<br>NH4 detectable<br>most samples FC 0-9k<br>TC 0-17k<br>As, F also | |||
| '''Wet season '''<br>NO3 0-4.4<br>TC 0-77k<br>FC 0-9k | |||
| Wet and dry season | |||
| Overall contamination levels higher during wet season for two districts and lower for one district and significantly higher in unprotected sources. | |||
| Pritchard et al. (2008) | |||
|-valign="top" | |||
| 2Tamatave and Foulpointe, Madagascar | |||
| Weathered basement and unconsolidate d sediments | |||
| Boreholes (53) | |||
| colspan="2" | FC 73%>0, 55% 0-10, 54%>10<br>NO3 4.4-35, mean 23<br>Pb 1-215, mean ca. 5 | |||
| One-off survey | |||
| Widespread drinking water contaminated with FC and concerns over Pb from pump materials | |||
| MacCarthy et al. (2013) | |||
|-valign="top" | |||
| 3Epworth and Harare, Zimbabwe | |||
| Granite | |||
| Wells andboreholes, transect of formal and informal zones (18) | |||
| colspan="2" | NO3 0-30, mean 11<br>PO4 0-27.2, mean 3.03<br>FC 0-2, mean 0.75 (cfu x104) | |||
| Survey carried out withduplicate sampling | |||
| Pit latrines, faecal coliforms in older and informal trading areas, urban agriculture, home industries and commercial areas | |||
| Zingoni et al. (2005) | |||
|} | |} | ||
SEC-specific electrical conductivity, PCA=Principal component analysis, ''LR''= logstic regression, TDS= total dissolved solids, TH=total hardness, , BOD-biological oxygen demand, COD=chemical oxygen demand, FC=faecal coliforms, EC= E. Coli, TC=total coliforms, FS=faecal streptococcus. Microbiological units as cfc/100 mL unless stated otherwise, TNCT=too numerous to count, BDL=below detection limit. Notation: 1Case-studies presenting data from a limited number of sites (n<20), limited temporal resolution as a single survey or use only basic chemical indicators and limited analysis of the results; 2 Case studies which either draw from larger data sets or include both chemical and microbiological indicators but have limited data analysis regarding sanitary risk factors; 3 Case studies with greater temporal resolution or are accompanied by a more thorough analysis of the data, for example using statistical techniques to understand the significance different risk factors on water quality observations. | |||
[[category: OR/15/009 Threats to groundwater supplies from contamination in Sierra Leone, with special reference to Ebola care facilities | 06]] | [[category: OR/15/009 Threats to groundwater supplies from contamination in Sierra Leone, with special reference to Ebola care facilities | 06]] |
Revision as of 16:07, 12 June 2015
Lapworth D J, Carter R C, Pedley S and MacDonald A M. 2015. Threats to groundwater supplies from contamination in Sierra Leone, with special reference to Ebola care facilities. British Geological Survey Internal Report, OR/15/009. |
Area | Geology | Sample sites (n) | Results from selected water quality parameters* | Sampling time frame | Conclusion and sources of contamination | Reference | |
2Bombali, Sierra Leone | Granitic Basement | Wells (60) | FC 0-80, mean 16.6 SEC 38-554 NO3 25-280 Turb, and other majors, pH <6.5 |
Single study during the wet season May- June 2010 | Wells contaminated with FC, 60% above. Who standards. Low pH concern for corrosion. | Ibemenuga and Avoaja (2014) | |
3Njala, Sierra Leone | Granitic Basement | Springs and wells (8) | FC 50-39k, mean 3.2k FS 5-2k |
Monthly Wet and dry season sampling | Increased contamination during the onset of dry season and at the start of rainy season | Wright (1986) | |
3Moyamba, Sierra Leone | Granitic Basement | Springs and shallow wells (13) | FC 15-251k FS 12-63k, mean 501 SEC 7.6-206, mean 30 Turb, pH 5-6.5 |
Transition from dry to wet season, multiple sampling occasions | Increase risk during onset of wet season sustained risk during dry season for wells. No sanitation, open defecation practiced. | Wright (1982) | |
3Bo, Sierra Leone | Granitic Basement | Wells (33) lined and unlined | FC 0-75, mean 19.6 NO3 0.5-28, mean 7.7 PO4 0.01-11.5, mean 1.7 SEC 39-1281, mean 362 |
Wet season | Distance from field significant predictor of FC, not distance from toilet/PL | Jimmy et al. (2013) | |
3Conakry, Guinea | Volcanic rocks, fissured | Wells (69) | Mod.wells FC 370-1x105 FS 90-9k NO3 2-46 NH4 0.06-7 Cl 17-130 F 0-0.16 Turb. 1-70 |
Trad. wells FC 50-2 x105 FS 150-2 x104 NO37-51 NH4 0.01-8 Cl 8-284 F 0.0.38 Turb. 1-63 |
Dry season April-May 1994 | Widespread contamination by nitrate and FC linked to poor sanitation and well construction | Gélinas et al. (1996) |
2Various. Ivory coast |
Basement | Boreholes (230) | NO3 mean 69 | 1981 and 1982 | High nitrate (up to 200 mg/L) linked to domestic pollution and deforestation | Faillat (1990) | |
2Bolama City, Guinea Bissau, | Sandy soils and Cenozoic–Modern sediments | Wells (28) | SEC 27-326, mean 136 Turb. 1-26, mean 6.5 TC 0-23000, mean 2306 FC 0-5000, mean 410 Fecal Enterococci 0-850, mean 74 NO3 0.9-55.3, mean 16.6 NH4 0.01-1.37, mean 0.11 NO2 0.03-0.13, mean 0.04 Cu, Fe, Cr, As, |
July 2006 | 80% of wells contaminated with FC linked to widespread use of PL | [file:///W:/PP/GraphicCommunications/Graphic%20Design/Live_Jobs/2014%20Reports/2015/15009/OR15009.docx#_bookmark8 Bordalo and Savva-] Bordalo (2007) | |
2Cotonou, Benin | Quaternary to mid Pleistocene sandstone | Dug wells in upper aquifer in densely populated area (379) | SEC 320-1045 Mn 0.06-0.19 NO3 10.4-118 PO4 <0.05-21.6 SO4 3.14-86.3 |
May 1991, August 1991 and April 1992 | High P and K concentrations in upper aquifers linked to anthropogenic pollution | Boukari et al. (1996) | |
1Kumasi, Ghana | Precambrian Basement | Hand-dug wells (10) | TDS 6-230, mean 113 NO3 0-0.968, mean 0.16 PO4 0.67-15, mean 7.8 TH 8-103, mean 54 TC and EC <20 |
N/A | Water quality survey showed that water quality parameters were within WHO drinking water guideline values | Nkansah et al. (2010) | |
3Kumasi, Ghana | Precambrian Basement | Borehole and wells in peri-urban communities (9) | Fe 0.001-0.955 Mn 0.018-0.238 Pb 0.005-0.074 TC 3-16.8×106 FC 1.5-4.37×104 Enterococci 1.3-53.5 |
Monthly between Dec 2000 and Jan 2001 | Poor quality overall, contamination linked to proximity to PL and refuse tips as well as livestock | Obiri-Danso et al. (2009) | |
3Ilesha, Nigeria | Basement | Wells (86) | Mean results: NO3 35 Cl 34 SO4 2.8 |
Single survey | Evidence of anthropogenic impact on water quality degradation using PCA | Malomo et al. (1990) | |
1Benin City, Nigeria | Quaternary to mid Pleistocene sandstone | Boreholes and open wells (6) | Pb 0.03-0.25 Zn 0.98-7.19 Cr 0.02-1.1 Cd Nd-0.23 FC 4600-240000 FS 600-35000 |
Single survey | Elevated Pb, Cr, Cd and Zn attributed to indiscriminate waste disposal and FC occurrence linked to PL, soak- always and septic tanks | Erah and Akujieze (2002) | |
2Calabar, Nigeria | Tertiary to recent sands and gravels | Existing wells (20) | BOD 0.06-4.09, mean 1.72 N 0.09-3.5, mean 2.15 Cl 0.1-1, mean 0.45 FC 0.75-4.32, mean 1.86 |
N/A | FC, nitrate and Cl had a positive correlation with urbanisation | Eni et al. (2011) | |
1Ibadan, Nigeria | Basement, banded gneiss and schist | Existing wells (N/A) | TSS 159-186.6, mean 174 Cl 1.1-10, mean 5 TC 2300-9200, mean 5120 |
Dry season | Gross pollution of groundwater attributed to poor well construction, PL and waste management | Ochieng et al. (2011) | |
2Ibogun, Pakoto, Ifo, Ogun State, Nigeria | Cambrian basement geology and weathered regolith | Dug wells, communities of 5000-20,000 people (20) | TDS 100-2200 TH 6-246 NO3 0.8-88 TC 0-0.6 (cfu x105) FC 0-0.2 (cfu x105) FS 0-0.7 (cfu x105) |
July-August 2009 | Water quality standards for nitrate, FC, FS not met for significant proportion of wells | Adelekan (2010) | |
1Lagos, Nigeria | Alluvium over sedimentary | Urban wells (18) | TDS 79-1343, mean 514 TH 24-289, mean 110 Na 8-274, mean 79 NO3 0.05-1.51, mean 0.4 Pb 0-1.9, mean 1.6 Zn 0-4.2 mean 0.3 |
Survey August to October 2004 | Sources of contamination included sanitation, textiles, pharmaceuticals, food, tanneries, motor industry | Yusuf (2007) | |
1Surulere, Lagos, Nigeria | Alluvium over sedimentary | Wells and boreholes in a middle class area (49) | Al 1-99 µg/L Cd 1-98 µg/L Pb 1-24 µg/L |
July 2009 | Pb and Cd above WHO drinking water standards in >30% of sites | Momodu and Anyakora (2010) | |
1Abeokuta, Nigeria | Basement igneous and metamorphic | Shallow wells including sanitary survey (40) | All bacterial count>20 Maximum 800 EC+PA+SAL | December 2005 | Shallow groundwater is highly contaminated with bacteria. Sources include pit latrines, livestock and solid waste | Olabisi et al. (2008) | |
2Abeokuta, Nigeria, urban & peri-urban | Basement igneous and metamorphic | Shallow wells (76) | Urban (mean) TDS 402 TH 30.3 NO3 12.02 PO4 0.21 Pb 0.25 Zn 0.12 TC 10500 |
Peri-urban (mean) TDS 263 TH 31.7 NO3 10.7 PO4 0.03 Pb 0.19 Zn 0.09 TC 10000 |
Dry season | Mean values for Pb, nitrate EC and TC > WHO standards. Trading, textiles, transport, cottage industries, pit latrines Generally higher in dry season | Orebiyi et al. (2010) |
1Peri-urban area, Abeokuta, Nigeria | Basement igneous and metamorphic | Hand-dug wells (25) | TDS 50-270, mean 163 NO3 2.97-40.7, mean 17.6 NH4 0-0.59, mean 0.11 PO4 12-86 µg/L , mean 46 TH 12-210 , mean 106 |
Rainy season 2008 | Direct surface run off into wells is suggested as possible contamination source | Taiwo et al. (2011) | |
1Warri River plain, Delta, Nigeria | Alluvial Benin formation | Boreholes near WW treatment plant | TDS 16-81 COD 0.4-44.4 NO3 0.3-1.2 Fe 0.05-0.15 |
2 year sampling campaign | River infiltration, municipal wastewater, agriculture, oil industry | Ibe and Agbamu (1999) | |
1Warri River plain, Delta, Nigeria | Quaternary and older sedimentary sequences | Dug wells | Fe 0.32-2.75 Pb 0.058-0.443 Ni 0.008-0.188 V 0-4 Cr 0-9 Cd 0.75-8.5 Zn 0-1.8 |
N/A | Pb, Ni exceed WHO standards. Sources include Warri River, settlement, refinery. Highest values in village 3 km from refinery | Aremu et al. (2002) | |
1Masaka, Nigeria | Cretaceous sandstone and clay | Dug wells, high density (12) | TDS 528-935 NO3 44.5-92.5 Alk 67-179 Cl 41-118 Fe 0.085-0.199 Cr 0.005-0.0126 TC 25900-78400 |
Samples taken in wet season | WHO standards exceeded for a range of contaminants including nitrate, TDS, Cr, Cd and TC. High density settlement with shallow water table | Alhassan and Ujoh (2011) | |
2Yaounde, Cameroon | Basement | Springs and wells in high density area (> 40) | SEC 18.2-430, mean 87 FC 60% >100 FS 5%>100 |
One-off survey | Groundwater’s in high density zones show significant degradation (chemical and microbiological), linked to PL | Ewodo et al. (2009) | |
2Douala, Cameroon | Alluvium over Pliocene sand and gravel | Springs , wells and boreholes (72) | SEC 25-362 NO3 0.21-94.3 FC 0-2311 |
One-off survey | High levels of FS indicative of contamination from PL, related to age and density of settlement | Takem et al. (2010) | |
2Kinshasa, DR Congo | Alluvial and sedimentary sequences | Wells including sanitary survey | Dry season TDS 180-450 NO3 76-118 PO4 0.53-4.6 TH 110-149 Pb 0.04-0.09 Cd 0.13-0.20 |
Wet season TDS 200-710 NO3 97-198 PO4 3.6-14.6 TH 17-52.5 |
Latrines, metal works, solid waste dumps are main sources of contamination | Vala et al. (2011) | |
2Dakar, Senegal | Quaternary | Wells (56) | NO3 0-122 | July-October 1997 | Nitrate contamination from point-source seepage in urban areas | Cissé Faye et al. (2004) | |
2Mekelle, Ethiopia | Mesozoic sediments | Wells, springs and boreholes (100) | SEC 542-5300 TDS 330-3454 NH4 0.01-2.38 NO3 0.21-336 Cl 5.76-298 F 0-1.27, PO4 0.001-0.58 |
N/A | Highly variable water quality indicative of a range of redox zones and sources of contamination | Berhane and Walraevens (2013) | |
2Bahir Dar, Ethiopia | Weathered and fractured Alkaline Basalt | Dug wells and protected pumps in inner, middle and outer zones (8) | Middle and inner city TDS 20-600 NO3 0.18-57.2 NH4 0-12 Cl 46-270 FC 93% of sites Mean 1.5 log cfu EC 80% sites mean 1.4 log cfu |
Outer city TDS 20-70 NO3 0.08-8.8 NH4 0-12 Cl 0-40 |
Sampling over a 5 month period 2006/2007 | Groundwater contamination linked to population density and urbanisation. All dug wells and boreholes had microbiological contamination in excess of WHO/EU standards. Dug wells had significantly higher FC. | Vala et al. (2011) |
1Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Volcanics | Boreholes and springs (9) | Alk 8-41 NO3 0.72-35 NO2 <0.01 COD 6.8-41 Cl 6.8-28 PO4 <0.03-0.1 Pb 4.6-25 SEC 300-1200 TC 0-34000 |
Various | The authors made a link between the surface water quality and groundwater quality. Major sources of contamination inferred were domestic waste, and industrial pollution from textile industry and petrol stations | Abiye (2008) | |
1Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Volcanics | Springs and boreholes (10) | Zn 0.87-146 Ni 0.31-0.98 Cu 0.44-1.82 Pb 4.3-56.2 Cd <0.1-0.2 Co <0.1-0.12 |
2002 | Geogenic sources of heavy metals is the likely sources of groundwater contamination in this setting due to high heavy metal concentrations in soils and rocks | Alemayehu (2006) Goshu and Akoma (2011) Goshu et al. (2010) | |
1Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Volcanics | Springs and wells (63) | Ni 2-152 µg/L Pb <1 Co 0.5-165 As <3 Zn <20-2100 Cu 1.5-164 Cd 0.3-12.3 Cr 18.2-214 |
Februrary-March 2004, July to September 2005 | Urban area, leaching from polluted soils. | Demlie and Wohnlich (2006) | |
3Kisumu, Kenya (urban) | Sedimentary | Existing wells (191) | TTC 0->100k mean 894 NO3 0.06-45 mean 15 Cl 0-225 mean 796 F 3-29.6 mean 6.2 |
1998 and 2004 | Density of PL within a 100 m radius was significantly correlated with nitrate and Cl but not FC (PC) | Wright et al. (2013) | |
2Lichinga, Mozambique and Timbuktu, Mali | Quaternary/ Basement gneiss-granite complex | Hand dug wells: Timbuktu(31), Lichinga (159) | Timbuktu SEC 221-2010 NO3-N 35 med Cl 500 |
Lichinga SEC 220 med NO3 5.6 med Cl 13.5 |
Timbuktu September 2002 to May 2003 Lichinga, April 2002-August 2004 | Contamination of groundwater sources from on site sanitation traced using N:Cl | Cronin et al. (2007) |
3Lichinga, Mozambique | Mudstone | Lichinga (25) | TTC, EF (Enterococi) | Monthly for 1 year | Higher risk at onset of the wet season and end of the dry season. Predominant source was from animal faeces rather than PL or septic tanks. (LR) | Godfrey et al. (2006) | |
2Kampala, Uganda | Weathered Basement | Wells and springs | High density NO3 mean 67 Cl mean 59 TC mean 14 |
Low density NO3 mean 22 Cl mean 21 TC mean 544 |
Contrasting hydrological conditions | Significantly higher contamination in high density regions compared to low density | Barrett et al. (1998) |
3Kampala, Uganda | Weathered Basement | Springs (25) | TtC (FC) FS BLD-23000 |
Monthly between September 1998-March 1999 | Evidence of rapid recharge to springs following rainfall. Local environment hygiene and improved sanitary completion shown to be more important than on-site sanitation for spring protection (LR) | Howard et al. (2003) | |
3Kampala, Uganda | Weathered Basement | Monitoring wells (16) | Dry season SEC 272-345 P BDL-0.11 N BDL-5.5 NO3 24-144 Cl 31-50.5 TC 0-131 FC 0-35 |
Wet Season SEC 280-372 P BDL0.04 N BDL-263 NO3 24-692 Cl 28-192 TC 29-10000 FC 6-8300 |
2003: weekly March-May and September in dry season, and June to August, wet season. | High population density with pit latrines and livestock sources identified. Microbiological water quality deterioration after heavy rainfall | Barrett et al. (1998) |
1Kampala, Uganda | Weathered Basement | Boreholes and wells (28) | Limited inorganic and organic suit, no microbiology | September and October 2011 | Nitrate concentrations suggest poor sanitation and diffuse contamination. | Nachiyunde, Kabunga et al. (2013) | |
3Uganda, Kampala (urban) | Weathered basement | Piezometers (10) | 1.5 m down gradient of pit latrines NO3 5-90 Cl 50-1100 PO40.1-2 NH4 5-40 |
March-August 2010 biweekly sampling | PL found to be a significant source of nutrients (N) compared to waste dump. NH4 removal by nitrification | Nyenje et al. (2013) | |
1Lusaka, Zambia | Dolomite | Wells and streams in intensely urbanised area (9) | SEC 200-710 NO3 <0.1-43 NH4 <0.25-3.5, Cl 4.6-36 PO4 <0.1-4, B <1-10, As <0.2-0.49 Pb 0.14-0.67, Hg <0.4-13 |
July 2001 | Values for nitrate and Hg were in excess of WHO standards on some occasions. Poor sanitation and solid waste disposal implicated. | Cidu et al. (2003) | |
2Lusaka, Zambia | Dolomite | Boreholes (7) | FC 0-45 TC 0-58 SEC 401-1060 |
Single survey | Evidence for contamination in health centre boreholes by FC, poor waste management implicated | Nkhuwa (2008) | |
3Lusaka,Zambia | Dolomite | Private and public boreholes (N/A) | Alk 124-564, NO3 0.03-39, NO2 0.002-42, NH4 0.08-60 Cl 42-102, TC 1-TNTC FC 21-TNTC, BOD 2-69 COD 9-320 |
Various: 1995-2000 | Hydrochem, microbiology and incidence of cholera outbreaks compiled to show the rapid deterioration of GW sources associated with poor sanitation | Nkhuwa (2003) | |
2Ndola, Zambia | Dolomite and basement lithologies | Wells (123) and boreholes (60) surface waters (41) | Wells (median) TC 7 Zn 11.4 |
Boreholes (med) TC 0 Zn 139 |
April-June 2013 | Geological control on trace metal contamination. TC for wells>boreholes but no FC data collected. | Liddle et al (2015) |
3Kabwe, Zambia | Dolomite and basement | Private (13) and public (12) boreholes, private wells (57) | Dry season Wells NO3 0.1-187 (18) FC 10-6800 (180) Boreholes NO3 0.1-38 (6) FC <2-28 (<2) |
Wet season Wells NO3 0.15-174(22) FC 2-27600 (570) Boreholes NO3 0.1-41 (6) FC <2-760 (<2) |
Dry and wet season 2013-2014 | Widespread NO3 and FC contamination in shallow wells in both wet and dry seasons, wet>>dry. Generally good quality in peri-urban boreholes but evidence of contamination in some urban boreholes | Lapworth et al (2015) |
3South Lunzu, Blantyre, Malawi | Weathered basement | Borehole, springs and dug well (9) | Dry season SEC 210-330 Cl 21-35 Fe 0.1-0.8 FC 0-5200 FS 0-640 |
Wet season SEC 306-383 Cl 14-29 Fe 0.4-0.7 FC 0-11,000 FS 0-7000 |
Wet and dry season on two occasions | Groundwaters highly contaminated due to poor sanitation and domestic waste disposal. 58% of residence use traditional PL | Palamuleni (2002) |
3Southern Malawi | Weathered basement | Shallow wells (26) | Dry season NO3 0-2.6 NH4 detectable most samples FC 0-9k TC 0-17k As, F also |
Wet season NO3 0-4.4 TC 0-77k FC 0-9k |
Wet and dry season | Overall contamination levels higher during wet season for two districts and lower for one district and significantly higher in unprotected sources. | Pritchard et al. (2008) |
2Tamatave and Foulpointe, Madagascar | Weathered basement and unconsolidate d sediments | Boreholes (53) | FC 73%>0, 55% 0-10, 54%>10 NO3 4.4-35, mean 23 Pb 1-215, mean ca. 5 |
One-off survey | Widespread drinking water contaminated with FC and concerns over Pb from pump materials | MacCarthy et al. (2013) | |
3Epworth and Harare, Zimbabwe | Granite | Wells andboreholes, transect of formal and informal zones (18) | NO3 0-30, mean 11 PO4 0-27.2, mean 3.03 FC 0-2, mean 0.75 (cfu x104) |
Survey carried out withduplicate sampling | Pit latrines, faecal coliforms in older and informal trading areas, urban agriculture, home industries and commercial areas | Zingoni et al. (2005) |
SEC-specific electrical conductivity, PCA=Principal component analysis, LR= logstic regression, TDS= total dissolved solids, TH=total hardness, , BOD-biological oxygen demand, COD=chemical oxygen demand, FC=faecal coliforms, EC= E. Coli, TC=total coliforms, FS=faecal streptococcus. Microbiological units as cfc/100 mL unless stated otherwise, TNCT=too numerous to count, BDL=below detection limit. Notation: 1Case-studies presenting data from a limited number of sites (n<20), limited temporal resolution as a single survey or use only basic chemical indicators and limited analysis of the results; 2 Case studies which either draw from larger data sets or include both chemical and microbiological indicators but have limited data analysis regarding sanitary risk factors; 3 Case studies with greater temporal resolution or are accompanied by a more thorough analysis of the data, for example using statistical techniques to understand the significance different risk factors on water quality observations.