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Assessment of groundwater vulnerability to pollution: a combination of GIS, fuzzy logic and decision making techniques

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present a methodology to estimate the risk of an aquifer to be polluted from concentrated and/or dispersed sources, which applies an overlay and index method involving several parameters.
Abstract
The assessment of groundwater vulnerability to pollution aims at highlighting areas at a high risk of being polluted. This study presents a methodology, to estimate the risk of an aquifer to be polluted from concentrated and/or dispersed sources, which applies an overlay and index method involving several parameters. The parameters are categorized into three factor groups: factor group 1 includes parameters relevant to the internal aquifer system’s properties, thus determining the intrinsic aquifer vulnerability to pollution; factor group 2 comprises parameters relevant to the external stresses to the system, such as human activities and rainfall effects; factor group 3 incorporates specific geological settings, such as the presence of geothermal fields or salt intrusion zones, into the computation process. Geographical information systems have been used for data acquisition and processing, coupled with a multicriteria evaluation technique enhanced with fuzzy factor standardization. Moreover, besides assigning weights to factors, a second set of weights, i.e., order weights, has been applied to factors on a pixel by pixel basis, thus allowing control of the level of risk in the vulnerability determination and the enhancement of local site characteristics. Individual analysis of each factor group resulted in three intermediate groundwater vulnerability to pollution maps, which were combined in order to produce the final composite groundwater vulnerability map for the study area. The method has been applied in the region of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace (Northern Greece), an area of approximately 14,000 km2. The methodology has been tested and calibrated against the measured nitrate concentration in wells, in the northwest part of the study area, providing results related to the aggregation and weighting procedure.

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Landfill site selection using spatial information technologies and AHP: a case study in Beijing, China.

TL;DR: This work considered economic factors, calculated criteria weights using the analytical hierarchy process (AHP), and built a hierarchy model for solving the solid waste landfill site-selection problem in Beijing, China and provides essential support for decision-makers in the assessment of waste management problems in Beijing and other rapidly developing cities in developing countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flood management and a GIS modelling method to assess flood-hazard areas—a case study

TL;DR: Kourgialas et al. as discussed by the authors presented a viable approach for flood management strategy in a river basin based on the European Floods Directive, which can be applied to any river basin and here was applied to the Koiliaris River basin in Greece.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solid waste disposal site selection with GIS and AHP methodology: a case study in Senirkent-Uluborlu (Isparta) Basin, Turkey.

TL;DR: In this study, landfill site selection is performed using the Geographic Information System (GIS), the Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP), and the remote sensing methods for the Senirkent–Uluborlu Basin to determine suitable regions in the basin for solid waste landfill disposal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental impact assessment of mountain tourism in developing regions: A study in Ladakh, Indian Himalaya

TL;DR: In this article, a study devoted to assessing the adverse environmental impacts of tourism, and in particular of trekking-related activities, in Ladakh, Indian Himalaya is presented, based on the use of Geographical Information System (GIS) modeling and remote sensing imageries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of groundwater contamination risk using hazard quantification, a modified DRASTIC model and groundwater value, Beijing Plain, China.

TL;DR: A groundwater contamination risk assessment method that integrates hazards, intrinsic vulnerability and groundwater value is described, which suggested that landfills, gas stations and oil depots, and industrial areas were the most harmful potential contamination sources.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Scaling Method for Priorities in Hierarchical Structures

TL;DR: A method of scaling ratios using the principal eigenvector of a positive pairwise comparison matrix is investigated, showing that λmax = n is a necessary and sufficient condition for consistency.
Journal ArticleDOI

On ordered weighted averaging aggregation operators in multicriteria decisionmaking

TL;DR: A type of operator for aggregation called an ordered weighted aggregation (OWA) operator is introduced and its performance is found to be between those obtained using the AND operator and the OR operator.
Journal Article

Extracting topographic structure from digital elevation data for geographic information-system analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, software tools have been developed at the U.S. Geological Survey's EROS Data Center to extract topographic structure and to delineate watersheds and overland flow paths from digital elevation models.
BookDOI

Multicriteria evaluation for urban and regional planning

J.H. Voogd
TL;DR: A submitted manuscript is the author's version of the article upon submission and before peer-review as mentioned in this paper, and the final published version features the final layout of the paper including the volume, issue and page numbers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Current trends and future challenges in groundwater vulnerability assessment using overlay and index methods

TL;DR: In this article, a review of vulnerability assessment and mapping methods providing a new classification system is necessary, focused on techniques that use the overlay and index class methods and new research challenges in vulnerability assessment are identified, especially the need for developing dynamic links between numerical models and overlay-and index methods.
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