Sürdürülebilir Yeşil Kampüs Koleksiyonu / Sustainable Green Campus Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7755
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Master Thesis Hec Hms Hydrological Model Application Using Scs Curve Number and Soil Moisture Accounting: Case Study of Alaşehir Basin(Izmir Institute of Technology, 2019) Akdeğirmen, Özgün; Baba, Alper; Tayfur, Gökmen; Baba, Alper; Tayfur, Gökmen; 03.03. Department of Civil Engineering; 03. Faculty of Engineering; 01. Izmir Institute of TechnologyWater is known as source of life throughout mankind’s history. According to first records of written history; Sumerians and Akkadians used water for their inland transportation and irrigation systems. With first settlements, mankind’s dependency to water has been increased and became one of the most substantial natural resource in our modern age. Importance of this resource even more solidifies when we consider its property of being limited. With realization of global climate change in early 19th century; treat to this limited resource has been revealed. Approximately 68% of the freshwater on earth reserved in glaciers and icecaps and 30% is reserved in groundwater systems according to United States Geological Survey’s (USGS) studies. Owing to the quantity and less compromised to contaminants nature, majority of our freshwater needs met from groundwater. Although the importance of groundwater, its management have always been a challenge due to hard to quantify volumetric changings in aquifers. This study focused on creating a hydrological basin model to investigate volumetric recharge changings in groundwater system. Under scope of this study in an attempt to acquire groundwater recharge amounts; practicality of HEC-HMS hydrological modeling software has been investigated. A SCS Curve Number and Soil Moisture Accounting (SMA) loss methods has been chosen for HEC-HMS modeling application due to availability and accessibility of data that required for loss methods. After data collection from meteorological stations, core drill samples; both methods have been used in HEC-HMS simulation environment and their predictions have been compared. In the comparisons, it was determined that the SCS Curve Number method predicts higher flow potentials and groundwater infiltration amounts compared to the SMA method. Models foresee an average of 33.4 % of precipitation infiltrates into groundwater system.Article Citation - WoS: 73Citation - Scopus: 84Groundwater Contamination and Its Effect on Health in Turkey(Springer Verlag, 2011) Baba, Alper; Tayfur, Gökmen; Tayfur, Gökmen; Baba, Alper; 03.03. Department of Civil Engineering; 03. Faculty of Engineering; 01. Izmir Institute of TechnologyThe sources of groundwater pollution in Turkey are identified, and pathways of contaminants to groundwater are first described. Then, the effects of groundwater quality on health in Turkey are evaluated. In general, sources of groundwater contamination fall into two main categories: natural and anthropogenic sources. Important sources of natural groundwater pollution in Turkey include geological formations, seawater intrusion, and geothermal fluid(s). The major sources of anthropogenic groundwater contamination are agricultural activities, mining waste, industrial waste, on-site septic tank systems, and pollution from imperfect well constructions. The analysis results revealed that natural contamination due to salt and gypsum are mostly found in Central and Mediterranean regions and arsenic in Aegean region. Geothermal fluids which contain fluoride poses a danger for skeleton, dental, and bone problems, especially in the areas of Denizli, Isparta, and AydIn. Discharges from surface water bodies contaminate groundwater by infiltration. Evidence of such contamination is found in Upper KIzIlIrmak basin, Gediz basin, and Büyük Melen river basin and some drinking water reservoirs in Istanbul. Additionally, seawater intrusion causes groundwater quality problems in coastal regions, especially in the Aegean coast. Industrial wastes are also polluting surface and groundwater in industrialized regions of Turkey. Deterioration of water quality as a result of fertilizers and pesticides is another major problem especially in the regions of Mediterranean, Aegean, Central Anatolia, and Marmara. Abandoned mercury mines in the western regions of Turkey, especially in Çanakkale, Izmir, Muǧla, Kütahya, and BalIkesir, cause serious groundwater quality problems. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
