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Title Fractured rock hydrogeology / editor John M. Sharp, Jr.

Publication Info. Leiden, The Netherlands : CRC Press/Balkema, [2014]
©2014

Item Status

Edition Edition 1.
Description 1 online resource (xvii, 403 pages) : illustrations.
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Series Selected papers on hydrogeology ; 20
Hydrogeology (International Association of Hydrogeologists) ; v. 20.
Summary Fractured rocks extend over much of the world, cropping out in shields, massifs, and the cores of major mountain ranges. They also form the basement below younger sedimentary rocks; at depth; they represent a continuous environment of extended and deep regional groundwater flow. Understanding of groundwater flow and solute transport in fractured rocks is vital for analysis of water resources, water quality and environmental protection, geotechnical and engineering projects, and geothermal energy production. Book chapters include theoretical and practical analyses using numerical modelling, geochemistry, isotopes, aquifer tests, laboratory tests, field mapping, geophysics, geological analyses, and some unique combinations of these types of investigation. Current water resource and geotechnical problems in many countries--and the techniques now used to address them--are also discussed. The importance of geological interpretation is re-emphasised in analysing the hydrogeology of fractured, mostly crystalline rocks and in how critical this is for understanding their hydrology and the wise utilisation of resources. This is indeed hydrogeology in its broadest sense. The importance of, but great difficulty in, extending or upscaling fractured rock hydraulic properties is also made clear.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents IAH Commission on Hardrock Hydrogeology (HyRoC): past and present activities, future possibilities -- A conceptual model of weathered hard rock aquifers and its practical applications -- Similarities in groundwater occurrence in weathered and fractured crystalline basement aquifers in the Channel Islands and in Zimbabwe -- Outcrop groundwater prospecting, drilling and well construction in hard rocks in semi-arid regions -- Sustainable yield of fractured rock aquifers: the case of crystalline rocks of Serre Massif (Calabria, Southern Italy) -- From geological complexity to hydrogeological understanding using an integrated 3D conceptual modelling approach -- insights from the Cotswolds, UK -- Characterising the spatial distribution of transmissivity in the mountainous region: results from watersheds in central Taiwan -- Spring discharge and groundwater flow systems in sedimentary and ophiolitic hard rock aquifers: experiences from Northern Apennines (Italy) -- Fracture transmissivity estimation using natural gradient flow measurements in sparsely fractured rock -- Prediction of fracture roughness and other hydraulic properties: is upscaling possible? -- Scale dependent hydraulic investigations of faulted crystalline rocks -- examples from the Eastern Alps, Austria -- Methodology to generate orthogonal fractures from a discrete, complex, and irregular fracture zone network -- Remote sensing, geophysical methods and field measurements to characterise faults, fractures and other discontinuities, Barada Spring Catchment, Syria -- Using heat flow and radiocarbon ages to estimate the extent of recharge area of thermal springs in granitoid rock: example from Southern Idaho Batholith, USA -- Tunnel inflow in granite -- fitting the field observations with hybrid model of discrete fractures and continuum -- Uranium distribution in groundwater from fractured crystalline aquifers in Norway -- Technical quality of Norwegian wells in crystalline bedrock related to groundwater vulnerability -- Exploration and characterisation of deep fractured rock aquifers for new groundwater development, an example from New Mexico, USA -- Use of several different methods for characterising a fractured rock aquifer, case study Kempfield, New South Wales, Australia -- Main features governing groundwater flow in a fractured basalt aquifer system of South-Eastern Australia.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Hydrogeology.
Hydrogeology.
Rocks -- Fracture.
Rocks -- Fracture.
Rocks.
Groundwater flow.
SCIENCE -- Earth Sciences -- Geography.
Groundwater flow.
SCIENCE -- Earth Sciences -- Geology.
Added Author Sharp, John Malcolm, Jr., 1944- editor.
Other Form: Print version: Fractured rock hydrogeology. Edition 1. Leiden, The Netherlands : CRC Press/Balkema, 2014 9781138001596 (DLC) 2014006966 (OCoLC)862102773
ISBN 9781315778822 (electronic book)
1315778823 (electronic book)
1138001597 (hardback ; alkaline paper)
9781138001596 (hardback ; alkaline paper)
1306866197
9781306866194
9781317697633
1317697634
9781317697619
1317697618
9781317697626
1317697626
9781138001596