Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source

In southwestern Virginia, adequate sources of public water for small isolated communities are difficult to find. While many alternatives exist, one of the largest sources of water in this region is flooded abandoned coal mines. One such coal mine aquifer was chosen for a sustainability study in Di...

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Main Author: Anderson, Eric Trenton
Other Authors: Civil Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31709
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-041399-144250/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-317092020-09-29T05:42:20Z Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source Anderson, Eric Trenton Civil Engineering Burbey, Thomas J. Younos, Tamim Kibler, David F. Mine Hydrology Spring Recession Analysis Karst Hydrology Alternative Drinking Water Source In southwestern Virginia, adequate sources of public water for small isolated communities are difficult to find. While many alternatives exist, one of the largest sources of water in this region is flooded abandoned coal mines. One such coal mine aquifer was chosen for a sustainability study in Dickenson County, Virginia. A flowrate monitoring system was installed at the point of discharge from the mine, and the flow records from three months of data collection were analyzed. The recording period included one of the driest periods in recent years, and the flowrate data recorded provided useful information regarding the sustainability of the system. After a study of the geology and groundwater flow patterns in the region, it was determined that a coal mine aquifer is very similar to the extremely heterogeneous system seen in karst landscapes. Thus, techniques common to karst phenomenon were used to analyze the spring hydrograph. A spring recession analysis was performed upon five storm recessions, and the coefficients for each recession compared and discussed in light of known geologic information. It was discovered that the recession coefficients described the flow from the mine very adequately and that the mine response to a rainfall pulse was very similar to the response of certain types of karst aquifers. This information was used to predict a sustainable flow from the mine. A cross-correlation analysis was performed in an attempt to fit a "black box" model to the flow data, as well as to verify the results of the spring recession analysis. The correlation analysis proved that one rainfall event produced many separate reactions in the flowrate at the mine discharge point. This strengthened results concluded by the recession analysis. It was found that the flow record was not long enough to adequately create a statistical model, but a procedure was described that could be used to model flows once a larger flow record was available. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:33:26Z 2014-03-14T20:33:26Z 1999-03-30 1999-04-13 2000-04-14 1999-04-14 Thesis etd-041399-144250 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31709 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-041399-144250/ anderson.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Mine Hydrology
Spring Recession Analysis
Karst Hydrology
Alternative Drinking Water Source
spellingShingle Mine Hydrology
Spring Recession Analysis
Karst Hydrology
Alternative Drinking Water Source
Anderson, Eric Trenton
Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source
description In southwestern Virginia, adequate sources of public water for small isolated communities are difficult to find. While many alternatives exist, one of the largest sources of water in this region is flooded abandoned coal mines. One such coal mine aquifer was chosen for a sustainability study in Dickenson County, Virginia. A flowrate monitoring system was installed at the point of discharge from the mine, and the flow records from three months of data collection were analyzed. The recording period included one of the driest periods in recent years, and the flowrate data recorded provided useful information regarding the sustainability of the system. After a study of the geology and groundwater flow patterns in the region, it was determined that a coal mine aquifer is very similar to the extremely heterogeneous system seen in karst landscapes. Thus, techniques common to karst phenomenon were used to analyze the spring hydrograph. A spring recession analysis was performed upon five storm recessions, and the coefficients for each recession compared and discussed in light of known geologic information. It was discovered that the recession coefficients described the flow from the mine very adequately and that the mine response to a rainfall pulse was very similar to the response of certain types of karst aquifers. This information was used to predict a sustainable flow from the mine. A cross-correlation analysis was performed in an attempt to fit a "black box" model to the flow data, as well as to verify the results of the spring recession analysis. The correlation analysis proved that one rainfall event produced many separate reactions in the flowrate at the mine discharge point. This strengthened results concluded by the recession analysis. It was found that the flow record was not long enough to adequately create a statistical model, but a procedure was described that could be used to model flows once a larger flow record was available. === Master of Science
author2 Civil Engineering
author_facet Civil Engineering
Anderson, Eric Trenton
author Anderson, Eric Trenton
author_sort Anderson, Eric Trenton
title Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source
title_short Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source
title_full Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source
title_fullStr Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source
title_full_unstemmed Determining the Sustainability of Coal Mine Cavity Discharge as a Drinking Water Source
title_sort determining the sustainability of coal mine cavity discharge as a drinking water source
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31709
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-041399-144250/
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