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A2.2GZ2 Environmental Geology

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A2.2GZ2 Environmental Geology GEOHAZARDS SUMMARY Introduction Ground instability Seismicity Groundwater rebound Underground gas including Methane Hydrates Tsunamis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A2.2GZ2 Environmental Geology


1
A2.2GZ2 Environmental Geology
  • GEOHAZARDS

2
SUMMARY
  • Introduction
  • Ground instability
  • Seismicity
  • Groundwater rebound
  • Underground gas including Methane Hydrates
  • Tsunamis

3
Introduction
4
  • Geohazards are geologically-based situations or
    events that carry risk to life or property
  • Common examples include
  • Subsidence
  • Landslides
  • Earthquakes
  • and many others.

5
Ground Instability
  • Subsidence

6
  • Subsidence arises from the underground extraction
    of minerals
  • Coal
  • limestone
  • metals
  • salt
  • This creates a void that migrates upwards over
    time
  • The nature of the surface disturbance is complex.
    It depends on the method of extraction, the depth
    of the workings and the nature of the overlying
    geology.

7
Subsidence at Ferniehill, Edinburgh - former
limestone workings
8
Crown hole above tin workings near Redruth
(Cornwall)
9
Salt subsidence bowl, County Antrim
10
Ground Instability
  • Landsliding

11
  • Landsliding is one of the most common geohazards
  • It is relatively well understood and remedial
    measures can be designed to control it
  • Problems arise in practice from
  • unrecognised areas of old landslides
  • ongoing erosion (especially coasts)
  • exceptional events (usually rainfall in the UK)
  • These lead to unexpected or unpredictable
    landslides that are difficult to design against
    before they occur.

12
Holbeck Hall landslide, Scarborough 1993
13
Holbeck Hall hotel, Scarborough
14
Warden Point landslides, Isle of Sheppy
15
Lochearnhead landslide, summer 2004
16
Sevenoaks by-pass after reconstruction
17
Seismicity
18
  • Earthquakes are a well known geohazard
  • The energy of an earthquake is usually measured
    using the Richter scale, which is a logarithmic
    scale based on the surface acceleration of the
    ground
  • Although the larger earthquakes occur at plate
    boundaries, smaller quakes can occur within
    plates due to movement along old faults
  • Britain regularly suffers quakes up to about
    magnitude 5, which are sufficient to damage
    buildings. They are particularly prevalent along
    the line of Caledonian faulting and in the
    Carboniferous sedimentary basins.

19
January 2005
20
Groundwater rebound
  • Water table rise

21
  • Many cities across Europe have lost industries
    that formerly abstracted groundwater
  • London
  • Birmingham
  • Nottingham
  • This has led to a long-term rise in groundwater
    levels as the water table has recovered
  • In turn this has caused damage to infrastructure
    and building foundations
  • The spatial details of the rise are geologically
    controlled and often follow subsurface features,
    expecially in Quaternary deposits.

22
Groundwater levels in the Berlin area
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Groundwater rebound
  • Acid mine drainage

25
  • A particular problem is caused when rising
    groundwater (due to cessation of pumping) enters
    disused coal or metal mines and then exits into
    surface waters
  • Coal beds and metal ores contain sulphides that
    oxidise to sulphates when exposed to the air
  • Incursion of ground water then forms sulphuric
    acid (H2SO4) which in turn dissolves metals
    (mainly iron) from the remaining rocks.

26
Environmental Consequences
  • The general name for this problem is Acid Mine
    Drainage (AMD)
  • Acid wastes reduce water pH to below biologically
    viable limits
  • Fine solids of Fe(OH)3 and Al(OH)3 (leached from
    soils) blanket sediment surfaces, coat plants,
    suffocate animals prevent spawning
  • High metal uptake in aquatic plants may be toxic
    to the plant or consumer

27
Mining activities
Wheal Jane
28
UK Coalfields
29
Acid wastes
30
Acid wastes Carrick Roads
(some colour adjustment to emphasise plume)
31
Breich Water (Cuthill) following treatment
32
Cuthill treatment works - settling ponds
33
Cuthill treatment works - reed beds
34
Underground gas
  • Radon

35
  • Radon is a radioactive gas with a half-life of
    3.8 days. It is created by the decay of uranium,
    a minor constituent of acid igneous rocks such as
    granite
  • High levels of natural radon are thus associated
    with areas of granitic rock, especially in
    Cornwall, northern England and NE Scotland.

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  • Under some conditions radon can collect in
    enclosed areas such as buildings, cellars and so
    on
  • It is a potential hazard since it raises the
    level of background radiation by a medically
    significant amount.

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  • The radon action level is 200 becquerels/m3. At
    this level lifetime risk of lung cancer is
    increased by about 3.
  • Control measures include the installation of
    gas-proof membranes to prevent ingress and the
    use of actively pumped systems to remove radon
    from unventilated spaces.

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47
Methane Hydrates
48
The Nature of Gas Hydrate
  • Gas hydrate is a crystalline solid that consists
    of a gas trapped in a ring of water molecules
  • There is no chemical bond between the gas
    molecule and the enclosing water molecules so the
    gas is effectively caged within an ice lattice.
  • In fact, another name for this class of compound
    is clathrates, which is based on the Latin word
    meaning "to enclose with bars."

49
  • Methane gas hydrates are a remarkable natural
    phenomenon that may represent a significant fuel
    source
  • They may also constitute an important
    environmental hazard because their release could
    contribute to global warming
  • Either way, researchers need to understand the
    distribution and quantities present in subsurface
    environments.

50
  • Methane gas hydrates have been found in deep
    marine or sub-permafrost sediments along
    continental margins and along the Arctic Ocean
  • But current methods of detection may not locate
    all deposits.

51
  • In nature organic carbon from the detrital
    remains of dead organisms is converted into
    methane in two ways, biogenically (bacteria) and
    thermogenically (heat)
  • Bacteria that live in marine sediments survive by
    consuming organic carbon from the dead biota
    deposited with the sediment
  • This bacterial activity occurs in the top 10's of
    meters of the ocean floor.

52
  • Thermogenic alteration occurs when sediments
    containing organic carbon are deeply buried
    within a sedimentary basin resulting in elevated
    temperatures
  • When the temperature reaches 100C, the organic
    carbon breaks down to form methane (CH4) and
    carbon-dioxide (CO2)
  • Methane formed by thermogenic alteration
    percolates up through the sedimentary pile and
    combines with water to form the methane hydrate.

53
  • Methane can also exist as a gas phase (free
    methane) that is not trapped within gas hydrate
  • This free methane can form thermogenically,
    biogenically or it can come from melted gas
    hydrate
  • Free methane is generally found in the pore space
    within porous rocks such as sandstone.

54
  • The positive buoyancy of free methane means that
    it tends to migrate up through the crust to the
    surface unless an impermeable layer of rock traps
    it
  • As gas hydrate tends to cement sediments
    together it can in some circumstances act as
    traps to gas reservoirs.

55
Gas Traps
Two simple situations where layers of impermeable
sediment containing gas hydrate act as seals on
natural gas reservoirs
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57
Hazards - Seeps, landslides, tsunamis and sinking
ships
  • Underwater landslides can produce potentially
    fatal tsunamis
  • Around 7000 years ago a tsunami generated by an
    underwater landslide off the Norwegian coast
    travelled across the North Sea and swamped
    Iceland and the Shetland Islands
  • Its estimated that land as high as 20m above the
    sea level along the coast of Iceland was affected
    by the tsunami.

58
  • Sea floor slopes on continental margins are
    stable if the slope is less than 5
  • However, many continental margins with shallow
    slopes have scars from underwater landslides
  • A potential trigger for shallow slope landslides
    is sudden gas release from the sediments.

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  • This can occur if the methane hydrate layer in
    the sediment becomes unstable
  • The hydrate layer can melt if the temperature
    rises or there is a drop in the confining
    pressure
  • Melting suddenly releases the methane trapped in
    the hydrate along with any natural gas trapped
    below the hydrate layer.

62
Sediment without Methane Hydrate
120m sea level drop
120m sea level drop
Methane released to atmosphere
Sediment without Methane Hydrate
Temperature
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  • Melting suddenly releases the methane trapped in
    the hydrate along with any natural gas trapped
    below the hydrate layer
  • Twenty thousand years ago an ice age resulted in
    the formation of large ice cap that covered much
    of northern Europe and Canada, and resulted in a
    120m drop in sea level
  • The drop in sea-level reduced the pressure at the
    sea floor (due to the fact that there was less
    overlying water).

65
  • A drop in sea-level reduces the pressure at the
    sea floor and causes the melting of methane
    hydrate
  • The sudden release of gas results in landslides
    and slumps
  • It can also result in a plume of gas rapidly
    rising to the ocean surface
  • Gas in the water reduces the density of water
    leading to the loss of buoyancy of ocean going
    craft.

66
  • Is this what causes the mysterious sinking of
    ships in the Bermuda Triangle

67
  • Tsunamis

68
Tsunamis
  • Tsunami is a Japanese word with the English
    translation, "harbour wave."
  • Represented by two characters, the top character,
    "tsu," means harbour, while the bottom character,
    "nami," means "wave."
  • In the past, tsunamis were sometimes referred to
    as "tidal waves" by the general public, and as
    "seismic sea waves" by the scientific community
  • The term "tidal wave" is a misnomer although a
    tsunami's impact upon a coastline is dependent
    upon the tidal level at the time a tsunami
    strikes, tsunamis are unrelated to the tides.

69
  • Tides result from the imbalanced,
    extraterrestrial, gravitational influences of the
    moon, sun, and planets
  • The term "seismic sea wave" is also misleading.
    "Seismic" implies an earthquake-related
    generation mechanism, but a tsunami can also be
    caused by a nonseismic event, such as a landslide
    or meteorite impact.

70
  • Tsunamis are unlike wind-generated waves, which
    many of us may have observed on a local lake or
    at a coastal beach, in that they are
    characterized as shallow-water waves, with long
    periods and wave lengths
  • The wind-generated swell one sees at a California
    beach, for example, spawned by a storm out in the
    Pacific and rhythmically rolling in, one wave
    after another, might have a period of about 10
    seconds and a wave length of 150 m
  • A tsunami, on the other hand, can have a
    wavelength in excess of 100 km and period on the
    order of one hour.

71
  • As a result of their long wave lengths, tsunamis
    behave as shallow-water waves
  • A wave becomes a shallow-water wave when the
    ratio between the water depth and its wave length
    gets very small
  • Shallow-water waves move at a speed that is equal
    to the square root of the product of the
    acceleration of gravity (9.8 m/s/s) and the water
    depth - let's see what this implies

72
  • In the Pacific Ocean, where the typical water
    depth is about 4000 m, a tsunami travels at about
    200 m/s, or over 700 km/hr
  • Because the rate at which a wave loses its energy
    is inversely related to its wave length, tsunamis
    not only propagate at high speeds, they can also
    travel great, transoceanic distances with limited
    energy losses.

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Causes
  • Sea Floor Deformation
  • Tectonic Earthquakes
  • Landslides
  • Rock Falls

75
  • Tsunamis can be generated when the sea floor
    abruptly deforms and vertically displaces the
    overlying water
  • Tectonic earthquakes are a particular kind of
    earthquake that are associated with the earth's
    crustal deformation when these earthquakes occur
    beneath the sea, the water above the deformed
    area is displaced from its equilibrium position
  • Waves are formed as the displaced water mass,
    which acts under the influence of gravity,
    attempts to regain its equilibrium. When large
    areas of the sea floor elevate or subside, a
    tsunami can be created.

76
  • Large vertical movements of the earth's crust can
    occur at plate boundaries
  • Plates interact along these boundaries called
    faults. Around the margins of the Pacific Ocean,
    for example, denser oceanic plates slip under
    continental plates in a process known as
    subduction
  • Subduction earthquakes are particularly effective
    in generating tsunamis.

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Chilean Tsunami
79
Subduction Zone
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Side scan Image (RNHO)
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HMS SCOTT
87
BEFORE
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WITHDRAWAL
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  • THE END
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