Can Local ADE-based Models with Sufficient Detail Successfully Predict Transport?

Wednesday, October 7, 2015: 9:00 AM-1:00 PM
Convener:  Gedeon Dagan, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
9:00 AM
From heterogeneity characterization to prediction of transport in highly heterogeneous aquifers (with application to MADE) (48102)
Gedeon Dagan1, Aldo Fiori2, Igor Jankovic3 and Antonio Zarlenga2, (1)Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel, (2)Universita' di Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Ingegneria, Rome, Italy, (3)University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, United States
9:30 AM
Can Local ADE-based Models with Sufficient Detail Predict the Anomalous Transport Observed at the MADE Site (Invited) (59579)
Daniel Fernandez-Garcia, Polytechnic University of Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain
10:00 AM
Explaining "anomalous" solute transport at the Macrodispersion Experiment (MADE) site from a geological perspective (48155)
Marco Bianchi, British Geological Survey, Environmental Modelling Department, Keyworth, Nottingham, United Kingdom and Chunmiao Zheng, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States; South University of Science and Technology of China, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Shenzhen, China
10:30 AM
Break
11:00 AM
Comparison of different conceptual models for uncertainty propagation on contaminant transport prediction (38066)
Guillaume Pirot1,2, Philippe Renard2, Emanuel Huber3, Julien Straubhaar2 and Peter Huggenberger3, (1)University of Lausanne, ISTE, Lausanne, Switzerland, (2)University of Neuchâtel, Centre of Hydrogeology and Geothermics, Neuchâtel, Switzerland, (3)University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland
11:30 AM
Simulating the MADE plume through high resolution characterization (48279)
Mine Dogan1, David W Hyndman2, Remke L Van Dam2, Mark M Meerschaert2, James J Butler Jr3 and David Andrew Benson4, (1)Clemson University, Department of Environmental Engineering and Earth Science, Clemson, United States, (2)Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States, (3)University of Kansas, Kansas Geological Survey, Lawrence, KS, United States, (4)Colorado School of Mines, Hydrologic Science and Engineering, Golden, CO, United States
12:00 PM
The impact of non-Gaussian logconductivity distributions on transport, with application to the MADE experiment. (48085)
Aldo Fiori1, Elena Volpi1, Antonio Zarlenga1 and Geoffrey Bohling2, (1)Universita' di Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Ingegneria, Rome, Italy, (2)Univ Kansas, Kansas Geological Survey, Lawrence, KS, United States
12:30 PM
Discussion
 
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