Pollutant Release Level Prognosis: A Major Input Into the Flooding Concept for the Former ISL Uranium Mine at Königstein (Germany)

Author(s):  
Ulf Jenk ◽  
Jochen Schreyer

Abstract At the Königstein mine uranium was extracted by an underground in situ leaching method. WISMUT developed a flooding concept which allows the reduction of pollutant concentrations and prevent pollutant migration into the aquifers above and downstream the mine. The development of the concept and the documentation for permit application were based on a multitude of scientific and engineering studies and prognoses on substance output using two different approaches (upscaling of a flooding experiment, Numeric box model). Both modelling tools provide similar prognoses of flooding. With the flooding in progress (start January 2001), the modelling tools will be validated and further improved.

Ecotoxicology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 215-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Béatrice Gagnaire ◽  
Anne Bado-Nilles ◽  
Stéphane Betoulle ◽  
Rachid Amara ◽  
Virginie Camilleri ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Pearce ◽  
Zhaoya Gong ◽  
Xiaoming Cai ◽  
William Bloss

<p>In most European cities, the key air pollutants driving adverse health outcomes are nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5), with 64% of new paediatric asthma cases in urban centres attributed to elevated NO2 levels (Achakulwisut et al., 2019). In the complex landscape of a city, a synthesis of techniques to quantify air pollution is required to account for variations in traffic, meteorology, and urban geometry.</p><p>Here, we present the results from a comparison study between measured air pollutant data collected at Marylebone Road, London and the output from a three-stage modelling chain. This site was chosen due to the availability of road-side air quality data collected within a street canyon (aspect ratio approximately equal to 1) and daily traffic flow in excess of 70,000 motor vehicles. The modelling chain consists of: 1) real-time traffic information of vehicle journey times, 2) speed-related emission calculations, and 3) air quality box-model to simulate the interaction of pollutants within the environment.</p><p>While the transport sector accounts for much of the outdoor air pollution in UK cities, a limiting factor of current techniques is that traffic is approximated at coarse temporal and spatial resolutions. In this study, we present a novel technique that helps to ‘fill in’ the gaps in our traffic data by harnessing the power of real-time queries to Google Maps to obtain travel times between fixed locations, enabling the derivation of average vehicle speeds. This dataset can then be used to determine more accurate emission factors for NOx. Total emissions are then calculated with the aid of traffic flow data and vehicle fleet characteristics. The air quality box model simulates photochemical reactions that form NO2, the exchange of pollutants with the background air aloft, and advection of pollutants along the street.</p><p>Hourly travel times and total vehicle flow data were collected between July and October 2019, totalling 905 observations and calculated emissions values. Meteorological data from Heathrow airport and background air quality from the Kensington AURN site were used as supporting inputs to the air quality box model. Each observation was treated as a starting point of the box model, and the simulation was run for 1 hour, with mixing due to advection occurring every 60 seconds. Results are promising; when using the full model chain modelled and measured NO2 concentrations are significantly correlated (r = 0.467, p < 0.000). In comparison, when a constant speed of 30 mph is used to calculate total emissions, therefore excluding the impact of congestion, the strength of the correlation decreases (r = 0.362, p < 0.000) and the model underestimates pollutant concentrations.</p><p>The applications of this model chain are vast. For any street that is covered by a suitable mapping platform and has available data on vehicle numbers, it would be possible to provide a real-time estimation of pollutant concentrations at a high temporal resolution. This could be utilised in several ways, such as: assessing policy implementation, and providing a high resolution input for air quality modelling and health exposure studies.</p>


1992 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 223 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Reddell ◽  
AR Milnes

The presence of mycorrhizas, proteoid roots and leguminous nodules was determined in a range of woodland species (from a variety of habitats in soils formed on different parent materials) in the Kakadu area in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia. In addition, the chemical fertility and the occurrence of mycorrhizal fungi and rhizobia in rudimentary soils ('minesoils') forming in situ on waste rock dumps at a mine site in the region were compared with stockpiled topsoils from the mine area and undisturbed topsoils collected from the surrounding native woodland. A major aim of these investigations was to assess the feasibility of rehabilitating the waste rock dumps without spreading topsoils. More than 90% of the woodland flora examined had one or more specialised nutrient-gathering mechanism. Mycorrhizas were found on 82% of the species, with some 16% of species having both ecto and VA mycorrhizas, often on the same individual plant. Many of these observations are the first records of mycorrhizal infection in the particular genera and species involved. Soil baiting and dilution experiments showed that rhizobia and mycorrhizal fungi were ubiquitous components of the soil biota in all undisturbed woodland soils. However, they were absent or poorly represented in the stockpiled topsoils and in some of the rudimentary soils formed in waste rock at the mine site. The diversity of spore types and/or numbers of infective propagules of VAM fungi was lower in stockpiled topsoils and in minesoils than in the undisturbed woodland soils. Nutrient omission experiments identified that acute deficiency of P, and to a lesser extent N, was a limitation to growth of seedlings on all soils. Zn deficiency was detected in the only soil for which this was examined. A glasshouse experiment, using a young minesoil and application of basal nutrients, demonstrated that inoculation of Acacia holosericea seedlings with rhizobium could completely alleviate the effects of N deficiency. Under conditions of both N and P deficiency, dual inoculation of A. holosericea with rhizobium and spores of the VAM fungus, Glomus, only partly overcame the limitations of P deficiency on seedling growth. Induction of deficiencies of P and Zn in a second minesoil (through application of basal nutrients), demonstrated that inoculation of seedlings of Eucalyptus pellita with spores of the ectomycorrhizal fungus, Scleroderma, partly alleviated the effects of both deficiencies. Rehabilitation strategies implemented at the mine site using either soils forming in situ on the waste rock dumps, or by spreading stockpiled topsoils, will need to ensure deficiencies of P and other nutrients are alleviated and that viable populations of mycorrhizal fungi and rhizobia are introduced and maintained during early phases of vegetation establishment.


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