Hydrogeochemical Processes Controlling Groundwater Quality and Water-Use Constraints in Semi-Arid Central Iraq
Zainab Salah Abd Alameer, Amer A. Mohammed, Ali A. Al Maliki, Ahmed Gad, Muhammad Aufaristama, Alaa AhmedGroundwater quality in arid and semi-arid regions is increasingly affected by salinization, evaporation, abstraction, and agricultural return flow. This study evaluates the hydrochemical evolution, isotopic characteristics, 222Rn activity, and water-use suitability of groundwater and associated waters in Karbala Governorate, central Iraq. Seventeen groundwater, lake water, and municipal supply water samples were analyzed for physicochemical parameters, major ions, δ18O, δ2H, and 222Rn. Hydrochemical, isotopic, and water-quality assessment methods were applied to evaluate groundwater evolution, salinization, and suitability for drinking and irrigation. The waters are near-neutral, with pH values of 6.18–7.35, but are strongly mineralized. Electrical conductivity ranges from 1440 to 16,305 µS/cm, and total dissolved solids (TDS) range from 592 to 10,191 mg/L. Most samples belong to a Ca–Mg–SO4–Cl facies, indicating sulfate- and chloride-rich hard water evolution. The highest mineralization occurs near Karbala proper and lake-influenced sites. Ion ratios and chloro-alkaline indices indicate that evaporite dissolution, gypsum/anhydrite dissolution, carbonate interaction, evaporation, and local ion exchange jointly control groundwater chemistry. Stable isotopes indicate meteoric origin with variable evaporative enrichment; however, highly saline but isotopically depleted water, particularly W8, shows that evaporation alone cannot explain salinization. 222Rn activities range from below detection to 11.28 Bq/L and mainly reflect local aquifer contact and degassing. High TDS, sulfate, chloride, and very high hardness limit suitability for drinking-water use. For irrigation, the sodium hazard is low, but salinity, hardness, magnesium hazard, and permeability constraints make most samples unsuitable or restricted. Management should prioritize salinity and hardness control, treatment or blending before domestic use, restricted irrigation of the least saline wells under drainage and soil-salinity monitoring, protection of less mineralized recharge zones, and long-term monitoring of lake-adjacent and agriculturally influenced wells.