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Nitrogen transport and transformations in a shallow aquifer receiving wastewater discharge: A mass balance approach

January 1, 1998

Nitrogen transport and transformations were followed over the initial 3 years of development of a plume of wastewater-contaminated groundwater in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Ammonification and nitrification in the unsaturated zone and ammonium sorption in the saturated zone were predominant, while loss of fixed nitrogen through denitrification was minor. The major effect of transport was the oxidation of discharged organic and inorganic forms to nitrate, which was the dominant nitrogen form in transit to receiving systems. Ammonification and nitrification in the unsaturated zone transformed 16–19% and 50–70%, respectively, of the total nitrogen mass discharged to the land surface during the study but did not attenuate the nitrogen loading. Nitrification in the unsaturated zone also contributed to pH decrease of 2 standard units and to an N2O increase (46–660 µg N/L in the plume). Other processes in the unsaturated zone had little net effect: Ammonium sorption removed

Publication Year 1998
Title Nitrogen transport and transformations in a shallow aquifer receiving wastewater discharge: A mass balance approach
DOI 10.1029/97WR03040
Authors Leslie A. DeSimone, Brian L. Howes
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Water Resources Research
Index ID 70021057
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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