Using the GRAM Model to Reconstruct the Important Factors in Historic Groundwater Rebound in Part of the Durham Coalfield, UK
Abstract
Modeling of mine water rebound in the southernmost zone of the Durham Coalfield has been
undertaken in an attempt to reproduce observed water level recovery, since the 1970s, within five coal blocks
south of the Butterknowle Fault. The lumped parameter model GRAM (groundwater rebound in abandoned
mineworkings) was chosen to perform the simulations since it overcomes, to a large extent, a common problem
found in such studies, namely a lack (especially concerning historic hydrogeological records) and superabundance
of various kinds of data. The results obtained from this approach are satisfying and closely resemble the observed
pattern of mine water rebound for the mining blocks studied. Such research indicates the critical dependence of
predictions on factors such as the volume of water flowing into the system, the percentage runoff, and the value
of storage coefficient assigned to the old workings. Model predictions are most useful as a tool for improving the
conceptual understanding of abandoned mine systems and as a basis for evaluating alternative possibilities of
coalfield behaviour, rather than as a strict quantitative assessment for all management purposes.
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