ABSTRACT

This is the time when legacy, pathogenic, and emerging contaminants must be talked about, understood, and dealt with together. While the geogenic contamination of the groundwater is a well-established phenomenon that is considered as legacy contaminants that risk people’s health globally, both pathogenic and emerging contaminants like various water-borne pathogens and pharmaceutical personal care products (PPCPs) are becoming imperative for their acute and chronic toxic effects. While contaminated groundwater consumption leads to skin pigmentation, hyperkeratosis, kidney damage, cardiovascular disease, and children’s overall development, poor sanitation-related pathogenic microorganisms cause a significant number of child and prenatal deaths. Simultaneously, antibiotic microbial resistance (AMR) is expected to kill 100 million people by 2050. However, there are rare texts that combine aspects of all these three under a single book cover.

This book gives an understanding of the occurrence, fate, and transport of geogenic, microbial, and anthropogenic contaminants in the groundwater. It covers not only the scientific and technical aspects but also environmental, legal, and policy aspects for contaminant management in the environment under the paradigm shift of COVID-19. This book is intended to bring the focus on the natural contaminants—biotic or abiotic—in the post-COVID Anthropocene, which is illustrating a significant alteration of systems and the subsequent downstream impacts owing to globalization. This book has compiled global work on emergence, mass flow, partitioning, and activation of geogenic, emerging, and pathogenic contaminants in various spheres of environment with special emphasis on soil, sediment, and aquatic systems for enhancing the understanding on their migration and evolution for the welfare of mankind.

part Section 1|124 pages

Distribution, occurrence, and fate of emerging contaminants

chapter Chapter 4|27 pages

Solid waste and landfill leachate

The transient sources of emerging microbes and legacy contaminants for groundwater pollution

chapter Chapter 5|26 pages

Emerging groundwater contaminants

Their manifestation and consequences

part Section 2|121 pages

Techniques to study the fate, transport and removal of microbial contaminants

chapter Chapter 9|19 pages

Pathways for migration of microbial and organic contaminants

Special emphasis on run-off from aquaculture industries

part Section 3|117 pages

Environmental and health risk of anthropogenic and geogenic contaminants

chapter Chapter 11|20 pages

Emerging contaminants of potential concern in aquatic Ecosystem

Fate and transport in microalgae