Boundaries Of Impact Of Marine Aggregate Mining In Shelf Waters

International Marine Minerals Society
Richard C. Newell
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
2
File Size:
87 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

The United Kingdom marine aggregate mining industry is the second largest of its kind after Japan. Materials for the construction industry, sea defences and for many other purposes are exploited from shelf waters at depths of 30-50 metres by self-contained suction dredgers which often screen material to obtain a cargo of a particular quality. Assessment of the environmental impact of such mining activities both within the boundaries of the dredged areas, and in the zone of deposition of outwash from the dredger has in the past been mainly based on predictive models based on the settlement rates of the individual particles and assumed Gaussian diffusion principles during the settlement phase. Recent studies which we have made on both the mass balance for materials rejected during the dredging process and direct measurements of the settlement of material in the dispersing plume suggest that the zone of settlement is much less than that predicted from diffusion models. Instead of a downstream settlement plume of 10-20 km in the tidal currents of U.K waters, our measurements show that inorganic components of the dredger plume reach background levels in the water column within 880 metres.
Citation

APA: Richard C. Newell  (2000)  Boundaries Of Impact Of Marine Aggregate Mining In Shelf Waters

MLA: Richard C. Newell Boundaries Of Impact Of Marine Aggregate Mining In Shelf Waters. International Marine Minerals Society, 2000.

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