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  • 1
    Unknown
    Basel, Beijing, Wuhan : MDPI
    Keywords: geothermics ; development ; EGS ; energy ; exploration ; geothermal ; heat ; monitoring ; modeling ; power ; renewable ; resource ; supercritical
    Description / Table of Contents: Geothermal energy has been harnessed for recreational uses for millennia, but only for electricity generation for a little over a century. Although geothermal is unique amongst renewables for its baseload and renewable heat provision capabilities, uptake continues to lag far behind that of solar and wind. This is mainly attributable to (i) uncertainties over resource availability in poorly-explored reservoirs and (ii) the concentration of full-lifetime costs into early-stage capital expenditure (capex). Recent advances in reservoir characterization techniques are beginning to narrow the bounds of exploration uncertainty, both by improving estimates of reservoir geometry and properties, and by providing pre-drilling estimates of temperature at depth. Advances in drilling technologies and management have potential to significantly lower initial capex, while operating expenditure is being further reduced by more effective reservoir management—supported by robust models—and increasingly efficient energy conversion systems (flash, binary and combined-heat-and-power). Advances in characterization and modelling are also improving management of shallow low-enthalpy resources that can only be exploited using heat-pump technology. Taken together with increased public appreciation of the benefits of geothermal, the technology is finally ready to take its place as a mainstream renewable technology, exploited far beyond its traditional confines in the world’s volcanic regions.
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXX, 398 Seiten)
    Edition: Printed Edition of the Special Issue Published in Energies
    ISBN: 9783038421344
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Environmental geology 32 (1997), S. 157-174 
    ISSN: 1432-0495
    Keywords: Key words Mine-water chemistry ; Acid mine drainage ; Mine-water pollution ; Mine-water treatment
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract  Contaminative mine drainage waters have become one of the major hydrogeological and geochemical problems arising from mankind's intrusion into the geosphere. Mine drainage waters in Scandinavia and the United Kingdom are of three main types: (1) saline formation waters; (2) acidic, heavy-metal-containing, sulphate waters derived from pyrite oxidation, and (3) alkaline, hydrogen-sulphide-containing, heavy-metal-poor waters resulting from buffering reactions and/or sulphate reduction. Mine waters are not merely to be perceived as problems, they can be regarded as industrial or drinking water sources and have been used for sewage treatment, tanning and industrial metals extraction. Mine-water problems may be addressed by isolating the contaminant source, by suppressing the reactions releasing contaminants, or by active or passive water treatment. Innovative treatment techniques such as galvanic suppression, application of bactericides, neutralising or reducing agents (pulverised fly ash-based grouts, cattle manure, whey, brewers' yeast) require further research.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1435-0157
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Description / Table of Contents: RÉSUMÉ: Les eaux drainées de mines abandonnées de charbon ou de minerais sont souvent considérées comme un problème environnemental. Des exemples historiques d'industrie minières de plomb et de charbon du centre et du nord-est de l'Angleterre montrent que les eaux de mines peuvent aussi être considérées comme une importante ressource en termes 1) d'apports pour la dilution d'effluents, 2) d'eaux potables et industrielles, 3) d'agents de floculation dans le traitement d'eaux usées, 4) d'eaux minérales, 5) de sources de minéraux industriels, comme les alcalins et le baryum, et 6) une source d'oxydes de fer ou de sulfates pour colorants. Il est essentiel d'évaluer l'intérêt économique des eaux de mines et de leur contenu pour définir les choix de traitement en fonction du coût réel.
    Abstract: RESUMEN: Las aguas de drenaje de minas de carbón o metales abandonadas se suelen considerar una amenaza ambiental. Ejemplos históricos de las industrias mineras de plomo y carbón en las zonas central y noreste de Inglaterra ilustran que las minas de agua también se pueden considerar como un recurso importante en términos de 1) caudal de base por dilución del efluente; 2) aguas potables o industriales; 3) agentes floculantes para aguas residuales o tratamiento de aguas; 4) aguas medicinales (balnearios); 5) fuentes de minerales industriales, incluyendo metales alcalinos y bario; y 6) una fuente de óxidos de hierro o sulfatos para pigmentación. Una estimación del valor económico potencial de las aguas de minería y sus contenidos es esencial para el diseño coste-beneficio de los posible tratamientos.
    Notes: ABSTRACT: Waters draining from abandoned coal or metals mines are often regarded as an environmental threat. Historical examples from the lead and coal mining industries of central and northeastern England illustrate that mine waters can also be regarded as an important resource in terms of 1) baseflow for effluent dilution; 2) drinking or industrial waters; 3) flocculating agents for sewage or water treatment; 4) spa waters; 5) sources of industrial minerals, including alkali metals and barium; and 6) a source of iron oxides or sulphates for tanning or pigmentation purposes. An appreciation of the potential economic value of mine waters and their contents is essential for the design of cost-effective treatment options.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 382 (1996), S. 121-122 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] SIR-Moore1 infers from measurements of Radon-266 in coastal waters that submarine groundwater discharge into the South Atlantic Bight might amount to a flux equivalent to 40% of the total flow entering the sea from adjacent rivers. Noting that previous estimates of submarine groundwater discharge ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 236: 169-209.
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: Ever since the commencement of industrial-scale coal mining (in northeast England around 1600), substantial environmental impacts have been recorded as arising from both the mined voids and from the wastes left behind at the surface. In the early days of coal mining, complaints about such impacts were strident, as the newly established industry adversely affected long-established agricultural interests. When the coal trade had come to dominate regional economies in mining districts, its negative impacts came to be accepted as a necessary byproduct of the generation of coal-based wealth. It has only been since large-scale mine closures began to take place in the major coal-mining economies of the developed world during the last few decades that the negative impacts of coal mining have once more been deemed unacceptable. The environmental impacts arising from coal mining activities are fundamentally attributable to the exposure of reduced earth materials (especially coal, pyrite, siderite, and ankerite) to the oxidizing power of the Earth's atmosphere. The consequences range from the spontaneous combustion of coal to the release of acidic waters from pyrite oxidation. A typology of the known impacts arising from mine voids and wastes in coal mining districts has been developed, which recognizes many subcategories of impacts under five major headings: air pollution, fire hazards, ground deformation, water pollution, and water resource depletion. A robust understanding of geochemical processes is key to understanding how these impacts arise, and to developing sustainable mitigation strategies. The application of the newly developed typology is illustrated using the case of the Shilbottle Coalfield (Northumberland, UK). Although few demonstrable impacts have arisen in the categories of air pollution, fire hazards, or ground deformation, major problems of water pollution have required both preventative and remedial interventions. For the flooded underground voids, these took the form of a pump-and-treat system, whereas emissions of leachates from surface spoil heaps have necessitated the installation of an innovative hybrid' passive treatment system, comprising a permeable reactive barrier, oxidation ponds, and a wetland. Inverse geochemical modelling has clarified the linkages between the various types of water encountered in the coalfield, providing a baseline geochemical understanding upon which future investigations of remedial system sustainability can be based.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2012-02-28
    Description: Geomorphological features associated with groundwater discharge zones can affect ground conditions so greatly that they determine the outcomes of battles. Two cases in point are found in Scottish history: (i) despite outnumbering their English foes, the Scots lost the Battle of Flodden Field (9 September 1513), largely due to failing to identify the presence of marshy ground associated with an area of groundwater discharge; (ii) on 21 September 1745, the Jacobites defeated the Hanoverian army at Prestonpans by finding a way around marshland corresponding to a regional groundwater discharge zone, upon which the Hanoverian commander had been relying as a natural defensive feature. Analysis of both battlefields drawing upon present-day understanding of local stratigraphy and hydrogeological conditions allows identification of the specific groundwater discharge patterns that largely determined the outcomes of these two emblematic battles. At Flodden, the proximal source of groundwater discharge is Quaternary outwash gravels, distally fed from sedimentary strata (Cementstones) of lowermost Dinantian age. In the case of Prestonpans, the groundwater emerges from particularly arenaceous coal-bearing strata of Namurian age. Both case studies suggest that military commanders selecting advantageous terrain could benefit from consulting hydrogeologists who are familiar with the intricacies of groundwater geomorphology.
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  • 7
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 225: 121-157.
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: The earliest detailed technical descriptions of British mining practices still in existence (which date from the late 17th and early 18th centuries) dedicate many paragraphs to the problems posed by the unwanted ingress of ground water into underground workings. Excessive water in working areas seriously hinders production. More importantly, sudden inrushes of ground water to underground workings are a significant mortal hazard. In view of the problems experienced with water ingress to workings, the main preoccupations of the early mining engineers were utterly practical, focusing on the efficient removal of water which could not be prevented from entering the workings (by simple bailing, by adit drainage or by pumping), and on efforts to minimize water ingress in the first place (by the use of tubbing in shafts and the use of rock barriers and dams in working areas). Occasionally, the mining engineers took time to reflect upon the origins of the water they encountered in their work. In their writings we find some of the earliest accurate conceptualizations of issues of ground water origin, driving heads, hydraulic gradients (including vertical upward gradients) and natural heterogeneities in water quality. So successful were these early mining engineers in their endeavours that they bequeathed most of the technological basis for the development of large-scale public-supply ground water abstractions, and much of the basis for the geotechnical control of ground water during construction projects, from about 1820 onwards. By the late 19th Century, mining engineers concerned with ground water management became gradually isolated once more within their own specialist domain, where they went on to develop a vernacular hydrogeology of their own, replete with its own key concepts and vocabulary. Nevertheless, occasional interchanges of experience between mining and the water industry have continued to enrich both sectors down to the present day.
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  • 8
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 198: 89-97.
    Publication Date: 2002-01-01
    Description: The recent closure of the South Crofty tin mine, the last working mine of this type in Europe, has raised questions over possible environmental consequences. During several centuries of operation, the mine was dewatered by a series of pumps located at different levels in the mine. Older workings near the ground surface were dewatered by a series of adits that discharge into nearby rivers and streams. The quality of water draining from these shallow workings is generally good and no treatment is required. However, because of bad experiences at the nearby Wheal Jane tin mine, the UK Environment Agency were concerned about the quality and quantity of water which was expected to discharge from the deeper workings when groundwater rebound was completed. In order to address this problem and make predictions of the timing and volume of the discharge, computer simulations using the SHETRAN/VSS-NET model have been carried out. This model has already been applied to the simulation of groundwater rebound in several UK coalfields. However, the hydrogeological characteristics of coal mines differ considerably from the South Crofty mine. In this mine, the country rocks comprise granite and metamorphic slates, strata that have negligible transmissivity and very low storativity. Most of the groundwater flow is therefore in the drives' and stopes from which tin ore was extracted. The inflows to the mine during its operation were mapped and quantified, and were found to be mainly head-dependent. These inflows usually originated from fault zones in the rock, and also from nearby disused and flooded workings, which surround the modern mine. Predictions of the water level during rebound are compared with the observed water levels in the main shaft which have been measured since the mine closed. The model was then used to predict the dates when surface discharges could be expected to commence. One of the main limitations of the predictions was a blank' depth interval in the mine plan records, which could be interpreted in two possible ways: (i) the zone was worked in the mid-nineteenth century but the plans were lost; or (ii) the zone was never worked. Local professional opinion favoured interpretation (i), and the prediction scenarios considered most probable were based on the assumption that mining-related specific yield values would be similar in this blank interval' to those applicable in better-mapped intervals below. In the event, (ii) above appears to have been the true case, resulting in a marked steepening of the rebound curve during the later stages of rebound, with surface discharge commencing in November 2000, as much as a year in advance of most other predictions. A retrospective simulation assuming very low specific yield in the blank interval' confirms that the hydrodynamics were otherwise successfully simulated using the SHETRAN/VSS-NET code.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2002-01-01
    Description: The Cleveland Ironstone Field (NE England) is a major sedimentary iron orefield in which the principal ore minerals are iron silicates (berthierine, chamosite) and carbonates (siderite). The siderite in this area is known to be rich in Mg and Mn in solid solution with Fe. Although this ore assemblage would not normally be expected to give rise to acid mine drainage phenomena, a number of discrete ferruginous mine water discharges (totalling some 6.5 million litres (Ml) day-1) have been identified flowing from abandoned underground mine workings and old spoil heaps in the ore field. Some of these discharges are extremely acidic (pH [≥] 3.3), with total Fe reaching 1220 mg l-1. At the point of first emergence to the surface, most of the discharges are so highly charged with dissolved CO2 that they effervesce. Upon degassing, one of the discharges precipitates a ferroan calcite deposit, which is most unusual as a mine water discharge precipitate. All the other discharges precipitate more usual ferrihydrite and goethite ochres'. The geochemistry of these waters supports the view that oxidation of pyrite in the roof strata initiates dissolution of siderite in the old workings, releasing CO2, Fe and Mg to solution. This chain of reactions results in these waters having SO2-4 as their major anion (from pyrite weathering) with Mg as the major cation (except where Fe exceeds Mg in concentration). Two of the near-coastal discharges have Na as the major cation, and elevated Cl concentrations, suggesting a sea-water component. However, SO4/Cl ratios suggest that sea water can account for no more than 20% of these waters. Most of the Cleveland mine waters have significant environmental impacts, ranging from ecological damage to receiving water courses to flooding problems caused by the clogging of surface sewers with mine water precipitates. A range of remedial measures are proposed.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2002-06-01
    Print ISSN: 1430-483X
    Electronic ISSN: 1432-1165
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Geosciences
    Published by Springer
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