scholarly journals Urban hydrogeology studies in Bucharest City, Romania

2017 ◽  
Vol 209 ◽  
pp. 135-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Constantin Radu Gogu ◽  
Dragos Gaitanaru ◽  
Mohamed Amine Boukhemacha ◽  
Irina Serpescu ◽  
Liviu Litescu ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 1279-1285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Amine Boukhemacha ◽  
Constantin Radu Gogu ◽  
Irina Serpescu ◽  
Dragos Gaitanaru ◽  
Ioan Bica

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean M. Bahr ◽  
◽  
Christopher A. Gellasch ◽  
Stephen M. Sellwood ◽  
Joshua C. Olson

Author(s):  
Stefan Florin Balan ◽  
Alexandru Tiganescu ◽  
Bogdan Felix Apostol

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (24) ◽  
pp. 4054
Author(s):  
Alina Radutu ◽  
Guri Venvik ◽  
Traian Ghibus ◽  
Constantin Radu Gogu

Urban areas are strongly influenced by the different processes affecting the underground and implicitly the terrestrial surface. Land subsidence can be one of the effects of the urban processes. The identification of the vulnerable areas of the city, prone to subsidence, can be of great help for a sustainable urban planning. Using Sentinel-1 data, by the PSI (persistent scatterer interferometry) technique, a vertical displacements map of Bucharest city has been prepared. It covers the time interval 2014–2018. Based on this map, several subsidence areas have been identified. One of them, holding a thick layer of debris from urban constructions, was analyzed in detail, on the basis of an accurate local geological model and by correlating the local displacements with the urban groundwater system hydraulic heads. The properties of the anthropogenic layer have been characterized by complementary geotechnical and hydrogeological studies. A dynamic instability pattern, highlighted by PSI results, has been put into evidence when related to this type of anthropogenic layer. This thick anthropogenic layer and its connections to the urban aquifer system have to be further analyzed, when the procedures of urban planning and design invoke constructive operations modifying the aquifer dynamics.


2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 2085-2097 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Vázquez-Suñé ◽  
J. Carrera ◽  
I. Tubau ◽  
X. Sánchez-Vila ◽  
A. Soler

Abstract. Evaluating the proportion in which waters from different origins are mixed in a given water sample is relevant for many hydrogeological problems, such as quantifying total recharge, assessing groundwater pollution risks, or managing water resources. Our work is motivated by urban hydrogeology, where waters with different chemical signature can be identified (losses from water supply and sewage networks, infiltration from surface runoff and other water bodies, lateral aquifers inflows, ...). The relative contribution of different sources to total recharge can be quantified by means of solute mass balances, but application is hindered by the large number of potential origins. Hence, the need to incorporate data from a large number of conservative species, the uncertainty in sources concentrations and measurement errors. We present a methodology to compute mixing ratios and end-members composition, which consists of (i) Identification of potential recharge sources, (ii) Selection of tracers, (iii) Characterization of the hydrochemical composition of potential recharge sources and mixed water samples, and (iv) Computation of mixing ratios and reevaluation of end-members. The analysis performed in a data set from samples of the Barcelona city aquifers suggests that the main contributors to total recharge are the water supply network losses (22%), the sewage network losses (30%), rainfall, concentrated in the non-urbanized areas (17%), from runoff infiltration (20%), and the Besòs River (11%). Regarding species, halogens (chloride, fluoride and bromide), sulfate, total nitrogen, and stable isotopes (18O, 2H, and 34S) behaved quite conservatively. Boron, residual alkalinity, EDTA and Zn did not. Yet, including these species in the computations did not affect significantly the proportion estimations.


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