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    A comprehensive analysis of tracing the sources and dynamics of pollutants in a tropical Miri River, NW Borneo

    Access Status
    In process
    Authors
    William, F.B.
    Mohan Viswanathan, Prasanna
    Nagarajan, Nagarajan
    Sabarathinam, C.
    Date
    2025
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    William, F.B. and Mohan Viswanathan, P. and Ramasamy, N. and Sabarathinam, C. 2025. A comprehensive analysis of tracing the sources and dynamics of pollutants in a tropical Miri River, NW Borneo. Sustainable Water Resources Management. 11 (2).
    Source Title
    Sustainable Water Resources Management
    DOI
    10.1007/s40899-025-01203-w
    ISSN
    2363-5037
    Faculty
    Global Curtin
    Global Curtin
    School
    Office of Global Curtin
    Office of Global Curtin
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/97429
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    The fractionation and distribution of elemental composition in water (particulate and colloid) and sediments were assessed to understand the major geochemical processes that control the contaminant transport in the Miri River, NW Borneo. Further, the study also focused on determining the potential sources of geochemical elements and assessing the ecological risk. In this regard, 11 surface water and 35 river bed sediment samples were collected along the course of the Miri River and analyzed for various elemental compositions. Pollution indices such as geo-accumulation index (Igeo) and contamination factor (CF) were used to determine the pollution status of the river. Principal component analysis (PCA) was also used to identify the key geochemical processes that control the metal distribution and its sources. The interpretation of the results indicates that elemental distribution in size fractions showed an increasing concentration trend from the colloidal to the particulate fraction. Fe was observed to be the dominant metal in both water and sediments, indicating the weathering of river sediments. Cd, Pb and Zn are mostly derived from anthropogenic impacts and risk evaluation indicate the probability of adverse ecological threats to the riverine biota. Colloidal fractions (0.30 µm and 0.20 µm) were identified as the primary facilitators of contaminant transport, particularly in the upstream and midstream, whereas particulate (0.45 µm) dominates in the downstream due to the tidal influx of seawater. PCA analysis confirmed that the majority of pollutants were contributed by domestic and industrial discharge, seawater incursion, geogenic sources and agricultural inputs.

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