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Seminario de Investigación IS.UPC - "Development of Reliable Hydrologic Data Sets in Difficult Environments: Case Studies from Benin, West Africa"

In the lecture series "Darcy Lecture Series in Ground Water Science", the Institute of Environmental Diagnosis and Water Research (IDEA) and the Institute of Sustainability (IS.UPC) invited Professor Stephen Silliman to present the conference: "Development of Reliable Hydrologic Data Sets in Difficult Environments: Case Studies from Benin, West Africa".

Reliable hydrologic data are critical for sound hydrogeologic analyses and for the subsequent policy decisions based on those analyses. However, obtaining such data sets in the face of limited budgets and limited access to field sites can be a daunting challenge, particularly in rural regions in developing countries.

Experience in Benin demonstrates that such challenges are best met through close collaboration with a number of in-country entities (universities, local populations, government agencies, and NGOs) and integration of hydrologic expertise with political, social, and cultural considerations.

This presentation focuses on two case studies from Benin directed at developing data sets involving: (1) regional water quality in a large, fractured-rock groundwater system, and (2) temporal variation in nitrate contamination in rural groundwater wells using local populations as the primary data collectors.

This presentation demonstrates both the value of statistical analysis in the design and implementation of sampling plans in these difficult environments, and the power of close collaboration with in-country colleagues and local populations.

 

VIERNES 23 DE SEPTIEMBRE DE 2011
13 h a 14 h
AULA MÁSTER del CAMPUS NORD (Edificio A3)


Presentación
Jesús Carrera, Instituto de Diagnóstico Ambiental y Estudios del Agua


"Development of Reliable Hydrologic Data Sets in Difficult Environments: Case Studies from Benin, West Africa"“
Stephen Silliman, profesor de Ingeniería Civil y Ciencias Geológicas de la Universidad de Notre Dame, EUA.
 
 








Stephen Silliman is a professor of Civil Engineering and Geological Sciences at the University of Notre Dame, USA. He completed his BSE in Civil Engineering from Princeton University and the Masters/Ph.D. from the University of Arizona. He joined the University of Notre Dame in 1986 where he has pursued research in the laboratory, numerical and field aspects of groundwater flow, chemical transport, and colloid (microbial) transport in heterogeneous porous and fractured media. In this position, he has also been recognized for innovation in engineering education and service opportunities for undergraduate and graduate
students. More recently, he has developed a long-term research program on groundwater characterization, development and management in Benin, West Africa. His most recent efforts have included consideration of risk assessment and probabilistic methods as applied to groundwater management in both developed and developing countries.



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