نتایج جستجو برای: natural recharge

تعداد نتایج: 485585  

2007
C. Geoffrey Wheat Andrew T. Fisher

[1] A transect of four boreholes was drilled at ODP Site 855 in Middle Valley, a sedimented spreading center on the northern Juan de Fuca Ridge, near an eastern bounding (normal) fault. Systematic variations in pore water chemical profiles along this transect are consistent with recharge of seawater into basaltic crust along the exposed fault, followed by flow of formation fluid laterally withi...

Journal: :The Science of the total environment 2015
L J Lambán J Jódar E Custodio A Soler G Sapriza R Soto

The Ordesa and Monte Perdido National Park, located in the Southern Pyrenees, constitutes the highest karst system in Western Europe. No previous studies regarding its geochemical and isotopic groundwater characterization are available in this area. This work presents the results of field and sampling campaigns carried out between July 2007 and September 2013. The groundwater presents high calc...

2011
Jozsef Szilagyi Vitaly A. Zlotnik Janos Jozsa

Mean annual recharge in the Sand Hills of Nebraska (USA) over the 2000–2009 period was estimated at a 1-km spatial resolution as the difference of mean annual precipitation (P) and evapotranspiration (ET). Monthly P values came from the PRISM dataset, while monthly ET values were derived from linear transformations of the MODIS daytime land-surface temperature values into pixel ET rates with th...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
George W Kling William C Evans Greg Tanyileke Minoru Kusakabe Takeshi Ohba Yutaka Yoshida Joseph V Hell

Since the catastrophic releases of CO(2) in the 1980s, Lakes Nyos and Monoun in Cameroon experienced CO(2) recharge at alarming rates of up to 80 mol/m(2) per yr. Total gas pressures reached 8.3 and 15.6 bar in Monoun (2003) and Nyos (2001), respectively, resulting in gas saturation levels up to 97%. These natural hazards are distinguished by the potential for mitigation to prevent future disas...

2005
Mary Anderson

Water is the most important substance on Earth. While not a mineral itself, water rules the mineral kingdom since interaction with water is fundamental to all geological processes. And water can even slip into the mineral kingdom by freezing into ice. Water occurs in the hydrologic cycle as soil water, groundwater and surface water. We also find water vapor in the atmosphere and frozen water in...

2006
Grimur Bjornsson Einar Gunnlaugsson Arnar Hjartarson

Growth in geothermal power production in the Hengill area of Iceland, and a need for environmental impact studies that look hundreds of years ahead, has resulted in new challenges for numerical model developers. An existing, large-scale, iTOUGH2based 3-D reservoir model of the Hengill volcano has recently been recalibrated and used to study the impact of 400 MWe and 700 MWt cogenerations in two...

2012
H. Budzinski K. leMenach

The fate of various emerging contaminants as well as priority pollutants from the European Union Water Framework directive was examined along a complex combination of natural and engineered processes used to produce drinking water downstream of a major metropolitan area. The sampling points examined comprised Seine river water downstream of the Paris area, water from a primary well after bank f...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
David R Steward Paul J Bruss Xiaoying Yang Scott A Staggenborg Stephen M Welch Michael D Apley

Groundwater provides a reliable tap to sustain agricultural production, yet persistent aquifer depletion threatens future sustainability. The High Plains Aquifer supplies 30% of the nation's irrigated groundwater, and the Kansas portion supports the congressional district with the highest market value for agriculture in the nation. We project groundwater declines to assess when the study area m...

2003
David W. Watkins Daene C. McKinney David P. Morton

Groundwater is an important source of potable water because it is abundant and readily available in many locations and often requires little or no treatment. In 1995, groundwater accounted for approximately 20% of potable water use in the U.S., and approximately 50% of the U.S. population relied on groundwater for their source of drinking water. In most European countries, groundwater accounts ...

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