ICONE19-43567 Development of a Methodology for the Characterisation of the Long-term Geosphere Evolution : (2) Estimation of the Long-term Evolution of Groundwater Flow Conditions in a Tono Area Case Study

Author(s):  
Hiroshi Kosaka ◽  
Hiromitsu Saegusa ◽  
Ken-ichi Yasue ◽  
Tomohiro Kusano ◽  
Hironori Onoe
2005 ◽  
Vol 01 (03) ◽  
pp. 359-369
Author(s):  
IAN FENTY ◽  
ERIC BONABEAU ◽  
JUERGEN BRANKE

In this paper, co-evolution is used to examine the long-term evolution of business models in an industry. Two types of co-evolution are used: synchronous, whereby the entire population of business models is replaced with a new population at each generation, and asynchronous, whereby only one individual is replaced.


2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-95
Author(s):  
Marlena Dzikowska ◽  
Marian Gorynia

Abstract So far, very little attention has been paid to the roles of foreign subsidiaries located in Poland and if or how these roles have evolved. Simultaneously, there exists strong empirical justification for assuming these roles have been evolving over the years. Through a literature review and empirical case study of a foreign subsidiary located in Poland, this study analyzes the evolution of the subsidiary role and indicates its relations with groups of external and internal determinants. The case study examines a 10-year period of operations of a foreign subsidiary active in the automotive industry. The results indicate that the evolution of the subsidiary role encompasses factors such as markets served, functional areas of operations, and complexity of operations. The presented case study describes the complex relations among factors related to the subsidiary, HQ, and environment concerning the evolution of the subsidiary role.


Author(s):  
Lee J. Hartley ◽  
Martin James ◽  
Peter Jackson ◽  
Matt Couch ◽  
John Shevelan

The Low Level Waste Repository (LLWR) is the UK’s principal facility for the disposal of solid low-level radioactive waste and is operated by LLW Repository Limited. Presently, LLWR Ltd is establishing the long-term environmental safety of disposals of solid radioactive waste at the LLWR, through the submission of the 2011 Environmental Safety Case for the LLWR. This Environmental Safety Case addresses the Environment Agency Guidance on Requirements for Authorisation. Aspects of the submission consider improved vault design, closure design, and quantitative assessments. Each of these issues requires an understanding of the movement of water through the facility and the surrounding geology during operations and following facility closure. Groundwater flow modelling has been used extensively in support of the interpretation of field investigations, the development of the engineering design, and an assessment of the groundwater pathway as one of the major pathways by which contaminants may reach the environment. This paper describes these important aspects of the Environmental Safety Case. The geological environment in the region of the LLWR consists of Quaternary age deposits overlying older bedrock. The facility involves shallow excavations into the Quaternary deposits, originally for trenches, with disposals to a vault system beginning in 1988. In the post-closure phase these disposals are covered by a cap and surrounded by a cut-off wall to minimise the water flow around or through the waste. An innovative modelling methodology has been developed to represent the range of scales that have to be considered from the regional groundwater flow patterns over several kilometres, the scale of tens of metres around the immediate site area, and down to about 1 metre for details of flows within the repository itself in three dimensions. Detailed finite-element models of the flow through geological media and the engineered features are used to interpret site data and assess a credible set of post-closure situations and model cases. In the radiological assessment, a more simplified compartment model is used to assess uncertainties in hydrogeological properties and the long-term evolution of the engineered barriers. Together the approach provides flexible tools for understanding and assessing a comprehensive range of aspects including details of flows within the repository, dilution and migration in the external geology, the long-term evolution of the hydrogeological system, the implications of spatial variability and alternative geological models, and effects of uncertainties.


Tectonics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 33 (6) ◽  
pp. 936-959 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugues Raimbourg ◽  
Romain Augier ◽  
Vincent Famin ◽  
Leslie Gadenne ◽  
Giulia Palazzin ◽  
...  

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