Mixing Time for the Dead Sea Based on Water and Salt Mass Balances
(2010) In Vatten: tidskrift för vattenvård /Journal of Water Management and research 66(1). p.55-66- Abstract
- Water and salt mass balances for the Dead Sea were modeled. Precipitation, evaporation, river discharges, ground water flows, input/output from potash companies and salt production, and brine discharge were included in the models. The mixing time in the Dead Sea was modeled using a single-layer (well-mixed) a
two-layer (stratified) system.
Using the single-layer approach the water level was predicted to change from 411 m below mean sea level (bmsl) (in 1997) to 391 m and 479 m bmsl (in 2097) based on water mass balances including and excluding brine discharge, respectively, and to reach 402 m and 444 m for the two cases based on a salt mass balance.
In the two-layer approach the water level after 100 years was predicted to... (More) - Water and salt mass balances for the Dead Sea were modeled. Precipitation, evaporation, river discharges, ground water flows, input/output from potash companies and salt production, and brine discharge were included in the models. The mixing time in the Dead Sea was modeled using a single-layer (well-mixed) a
two-layer (stratified) system.
Using the single-layer approach the water level was predicted to change from 411 m below mean sea level (bmsl) (in 1997) to 391 m and 479 m bmsl (in 2097) based on water mass balances including and excluding brine discharge, respectively, and to reach 402 m and 444 m for the two cases based on a salt mass balance.
In the two-layer approach the water level after 100 years was predicted to change from 411 m bmsl (1997) to 397 m and 488 m for a water mass balance including and excluding brine discharge, respectively, and to reach 387 m and 425 m for the two cases using a salt mass balance.
The water mixing time using the single-layer description increased from 58 to 116 years when excluding brine discharge. Using the two-layer approach the exchange or mixing time increased in both layers, when adding brine discharge to the system, from 1.2 to 1.7 years and 11 to 15.3 years in the upper and lower layers, respectively. Good agreement was found between the models and historical data. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1692382
- author
- Bashitialshaaer, Raed LU ; Persson, Kenneth M LU and Larson, Magnus LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2010
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Mixing time, Salinity, Single-Layer and Two-Layer system, Red Sea-Dead Sea Canal (RSDSC), Dead Sea water level, Water-Salt balance, Historical comparison.
- in
- Vatten: tidskrift för vattenvård /Journal of Water Management and research
- volume
- 66
- issue
- 1
- article number
- 4
- pages
- 12 pages
- publisher
- Föreningen Vatten
- ISSN
- 0042-2886
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 0573c519-3c42-41b6-9b5d-ff3b2bd6924a (old id 1692382)
- alternative location
- https://www.tidskriftenvatten.se/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/48_article_4198.pdf
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 13:50:02
- date last changed
- 2020-06-10 15:47:33
@article{0573c519-3c42-41b6-9b5d-ff3b2bd6924a, abstract = {{Water and salt mass balances for the Dead Sea were modeled. Precipitation, evaporation, river discharges, ground water flows, input/output from potash companies and salt production, and brine discharge were included in the models. The mixing time in the Dead Sea was modeled using a single-layer (well-mixed) a<br/>two-layer (stratified) system.<br/>Using the single-layer approach the water level was predicted to change from 411 m below mean sea level (bmsl) (in 1997) to 391 m and 479 m bmsl (in 2097) based on water mass balances including and excluding brine discharge, respectively, and to reach 402 m and 444 m for the two cases based on a salt mass balance.<br/>In the two-layer approach the water level after 100 years was predicted to change from 411 m bmsl (1997) to 397 m and 488 m for a water mass balance including and excluding brine discharge, respectively, and to reach 387 m and 425 m for the two cases using a salt mass balance.<br/>The water mixing time using the single-layer description increased from 58 to 116 years when excluding brine discharge. Using the two-layer approach the exchange or mixing time increased in both layers, when adding brine discharge to the system, from 1.2 to 1.7 years and 11 to 15.3 years in the upper and lower layers, respectively. Good agreement was found between the models and historical data.}}, author = {{Bashitialshaaer, Raed and Persson, Kenneth M and Larson, Magnus}}, issn = {{0042-2886}}, keywords = {{Mixing time; Salinity; Single-Layer and Two-Layer system; Red Sea-Dead Sea Canal (RSDSC); Dead Sea water level; Water-Salt balance; Historical comparison.}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{55--66}}, publisher = {{Föreningen Vatten}}, series = {{Vatten: tidskrift för vattenvård /Journal of Water Management and research}}, title = {{Mixing Time for the Dead Sea Based on Water and Salt Mass Balances}}, url = {{https://www.tidskriftenvatten.se/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/48_article_4198.pdf}}, volume = {{66}}, year = {{2010}}, }