Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 16 segundos...
Inicio  /  Geosciences  /  Vol: 9 Par: 3 (2019)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Simulating 10,000 Years of Erosion to Assess Nuclear Waste Repository Performance

Adam L. Atchley    
Kay H. Birdsell    
Kelly Crowell    
Richard S. Middleton and Philip H. Stauffer    

Resumen

Long-term environmental performance assessments of natural processes, including erosion, are critically important for waste repository site evaluation. However, assessing a site?s ability to continuously function is challenging due to parameter uncertainty and compounding nonlinear processes. In lieu of unavailable site data for model calibration, we present a workflow to include multiple sources of surrogate data and reduced-order models to validate parameters for a long-term erosion assessment of a low-level radioactive nuclear waste repository. We apply this new workflow to a low-level waste repository on mesas in Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. To account for parameter uncertainty, we simulate high-, moderate-, and low-erosion cases. The assessment extends to 10,000 years, which results in large erosion uncertainties, but is necessary given the nature of the interred waste. Our long-term erosion analysis shows that high-erosion scenarios produce rounded mesa tops and partially filled canyons, diverging from the moderate-erosion case that results in gullies and sharp mesa rims. Our novel model parameterization workflow and modeling exercise demonstrates the utility of long-term assessments, identifies sources of erosion forecast uncertainty, and demonstrates the utility of landscape evolution model development. We conclude with a discussion on methods to reduce assessment uncertainty and increase model confidence.

Palabras claves

 Artículos similares

       
 
Elizabeth J. Catlos, Chandra S. Dubey and Thomas M. Etzel    
The Sikkim region of the Himalayas (NE India) may form an important microplate between Nepal and Bhutan. Here we report high-resolution pressure-temperature (P-T) paths taken from garnet-bearing rocks across the northern and eastern portion of the region... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Md Jahangir Alam and Dushmanta Dutta    
Nutrient pollution is one of the major issues in water resources management, which has drawn significant investments into the development of many modelling tools to solve pollution problems worldwide. However, the situation remains unchanged, even likely... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Ángel Rodés    
Cosmogenic nuclides are widely used to constrain the landscape history of glaciated areas. At nunataks in continental polar regions with extremely arid conditions, cosmogenic nuclides are often the only method available to date the ice thinning history o... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Olivia Steinemann, Alicia Martinez, Vincenzo Picotti, Christof Vockenhuber and Susan Ivy-Ochs    
Understanding how fast glaciers erode their bedrock substrate is one of the key elements in reconstructing how the action of glaciers gives mountain ranges their shape. By combining cosmogenic nuclide concentrations determined in glacially abraded bedroc... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Tim Jurisch, Stefan Cantré and Fokke Saathoff    
A variety of studies recently proved the applicability of different dried, fine-grained dredged materials as replacement material for erosion-resistant sea dike covers. In Rostock, Germany, a large-scale field experiment was conducted, in which different... ver más
Revista: Geosciences