Hydrodynamic model of hydrogeologic fracture system in Gruda ultramafic rocks, western Serbia
Abstract
A part of the Balkan ultramafic massif is situated in western Serbia and belongs to a mountain range with several prominent peaks, including Mt. Tara, Mt. Zlatibor, and Mt. Zlatar. The porosity of ultramafic rocks is generally very low, such that they are classified as nearly or completely waterless rocks. However, due to tectonic activity and exogenic processes over geologic time, some ultramafic rocks exhibit a certain level of secondary fracture porosity. Hydraulically interconnected fractures can form aquifers of the fractured type, such as the one found in Gruda on Mt. Zlatibor. On this location, the quality parameters of the groundwater in the fractured aquifer, drained via a spring called Bijela eesma, prompted detailed multidisciplinary investigations aimed at defining the elements of the aquifer for commercial water bottling purposes. Given that the investigations were comprehensive, the results allowed high-quality interpretation of the hydrogeologic conditions and provided t...he background for developing a hydrodynamic model of the fractured hydrogeologic system in the ultramafic rocks at Gruda. Modfiow software was used for modeling. This software is primarily intended for intergranular aquifers, but no programs are available for fractured aquifers in hard rocks with pronounced discontinuities. Modeling of the fractured aquifer in the ultramafic rocks at Gruda provided the following information: size of active infiltration surface, hydraulic conductivity of the porous medium, rate of recharge, residence time of a drop of groundwater from entry to exit, graphical representation of streamlines, and the like. Despite these difficulties, the results are satisfactory. The values of the analyzed parameters are believed to be objective and indicate a certain possibility of using Modflow in hydrodynamic modeling and solving hydrogeologic problems that involve hard rocks and fractured porosity. In practice, this is especially important for sanitary protection zoning of groundwater sources that rely on fractured aquifers.
Keywords:
Ultramafic rocks / Serbia / Hydrogeologic fracture system / Hydrodynamic model / Fractured aquiferSource:
Journal of Hydrology, 2020, 580Funding / projects:
- Geologic and ecotoxicologic research in identification of geopathogen zones of toxic elements in drinking water reservoirs- research into methods and procedures for reduction of biochemical anomalies (RS-MESTD-Basic Research (BR or ON)-176018)
- Simultaneous Bioremediation and Soilification of Degraded Areas to Preserve Natural Resources of Biologically Active Substances, and Development and Production of Biomaterials and Dietetic Products (RS-MESTD-Integrated and Interdisciplinary Research (IIR or III)-43004)
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.124268
ISSN: 0022-1694
WoS: 000509620900082
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85075380067
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Šumarski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Nikić, Zoran AU - Pušić, Milenko AU - Papić, Petar AU - Marić, Nenad PY - 2020 UR - https://omorika.sfb.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1138 AB - A part of the Balkan ultramafic massif is situated in western Serbia and belongs to a mountain range with several prominent peaks, including Mt. Tara, Mt. Zlatibor, and Mt. Zlatar. The porosity of ultramafic rocks is generally very low, such that they are classified as nearly or completely waterless rocks. However, due to tectonic activity and exogenic processes over geologic time, some ultramafic rocks exhibit a certain level of secondary fracture porosity. Hydraulically interconnected fractures can form aquifers of the fractured type, such as the one found in Gruda on Mt. Zlatibor. On this location, the quality parameters of the groundwater in the fractured aquifer, drained via a spring called Bijela eesma, prompted detailed multidisciplinary investigations aimed at defining the elements of the aquifer for commercial water bottling purposes. Given that the investigations were comprehensive, the results allowed high-quality interpretation of the hydrogeologic conditions and provided the background for developing a hydrodynamic model of the fractured hydrogeologic system in the ultramafic rocks at Gruda. Modfiow software was used for modeling. This software is primarily intended for intergranular aquifers, but no programs are available for fractured aquifers in hard rocks with pronounced discontinuities. Modeling of the fractured aquifer in the ultramafic rocks at Gruda provided the following information: size of active infiltration surface, hydraulic conductivity of the porous medium, rate of recharge, residence time of a drop of groundwater from entry to exit, graphical representation of streamlines, and the like. Despite these difficulties, the results are satisfactory. The values of the analyzed parameters are believed to be objective and indicate a certain possibility of using Modflow in hydrodynamic modeling and solving hydrogeologic problems that involve hard rocks and fractured porosity. In practice, this is especially important for sanitary protection zoning of groundwater sources that rely on fractured aquifers. T2 - Journal of Hydrology T1 - Hydrodynamic model of hydrogeologic fracture system in Gruda ultramafic rocks, western Serbia VL - 580 DO - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.124268 UR - conv_1478 ER -
@article{ author = "Nikić, Zoran and Pušić, Milenko and Papić, Petar and Marić, Nenad", year = "2020", abstract = "A part of the Balkan ultramafic massif is situated in western Serbia and belongs to a mountain range with several prominent peaks, including Mt. Tara, Mt. Zlatibor, and Mt. Zlatar. The porosity of ultramafic rocks is generally very low, such that they are classified as nearly or completely waterless rocks. However, due to tectonic activity and exogenic processes over geologic time, some ultramafic rocks exhibit a certain level of secondary fracture porosity. Hydraulically interconnected fractures can form aquifers of the fractured type, such as the one found in Gruda on Mt. Zlatibor. On this location, the quality parameters of the groundwater in the fractured aquifer, drained via a spring called Bijela eesma, prompted detailed multidisciplinary investigations aimed at defining the elements of the aquifer for commercial water bottling purposes. Given that the investigations were comprehensive, the results allowed high-quality interpretation of the hydrogeologic conditions and provided the background for developing a hydrodynamic model of the fractured hydrogeologic system in the ultramafic rocks at Gruda. Modfiow software was used for modeling. This software is primarily intended for intergranular aquifers, but no programs are available for fractured aquifers in hard rocks with pronounced discontinuities. Modeling of the fractured aquifer in the ultramafic rocks at Gruda provided the following information: size of active infiltration surface, hydraulic conductivity of the porous medium, rate of recharge, residence time of a drop of groundwater from entry to exit, graphical representation of streamlines, and the like. Despite these difficulties, the results are satisfactory. The values of the analyzed parameters are believed to be objective and indicate a certain possibility of using Modflow in hydrodynamic modeling and solving hydrogeologic problems that involve hard rocks and fractured porosity. In practice, this is especially important for sanitary protection zoning of groundwater sources that rely on fractured aquifers.", journal = "Journal of Hydrology", title = "Hydrodynamic model of hydrogeologic fracture system in Gruda ultramafic rocks, western Serbia", volume = "580", doi = "10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.124268", url = "conv_1478" }
Nikić, Z., Pušić, M., Papić, P.,& Marić, N.. (2020). Hydrodynamic model of hydrogeologic fracture system in Gruda ultramafic rocks, western Serbia. in Journal of Hydrology, 580. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.124268 conv_1478
Nikić Z, Pušić M, Papić P, Marić N. Hydrodynamic model of hydrogeologic fracture system in Gruda ultramafic rocks, western Serbia. in Journal of Hydrology. 2020;580. doi:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.124268 conv_1478 .
Nikić, Zoran, Pušić, Milenko, Papić, Petar, Marić, Nenad, "Hydrodynamic model of hydrogeologic fracture system in Gruda ultramafic rocks, western Serbia" in Journal of Hydrology, 580 (2020), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.124268 ., conv_1478 .