Natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal

In order to validate predictive models of the very long-term processes which affect the performance of radioactive waste repositories, there has been an increased interest in the information and understanding which can be obtained from studying similar mechanisms in natural systems. These "natural analogues", as they are known in the jargon of waste management, have been studied sporadically for many years, but there has been a considerable rejuvenation of interest in the last four years, possibly owing to the fact that performance assessment methodolo­ gy is gradually maturing to the point where it needs the kind of support which analogues can offer. Since 1982, the Commission of the European Communities has been involved in specific work on natural analogues in the framework of its activities on radioactive waste management, principally within the MIRAGE project which concerns migration of radionuclides in the geosphere. As a consequence, the Commission took the initiative, in 1985, of establish­ ing a Natural Analogue Working Group (NAWG) whose members can benefit from the overall expertise available for managing their own natural analogue research programmes. In this group, modeller' s requirements and the results of field research are exchanged at regular intervals. A number of wide-ranging investigation programmes, both on national and international scales. are currently underway or being initiated, and several of these have been discussed recently at the NAWG

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Côme, B. editor, Chapman, N. A. editor/a, Commission of the European communities
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: London, England Graham & Trotman Limited 1987
Subjects:Radioactive waste disposal, Analog computer simulation, Radioisotopes, Geochemistry,
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-94-009-3465-8
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:575892020-11-25T16:58:10ZNatural analogues in radioactive waste disposal Côme, B. editor Chapman, N. A. editor/a Commission of the European communities textLondon, England Graham & Trotman Limited1987engIn order to validate predictive models of the very long-term processes which affect the performance of radioactive waste repositories, there has been an increased interest in the information and understanding which can be obtained from studying similar mechanisms in natural systems. These "natural analogues", as they are known in the jargon of waste management, have been studied sporadically for many years, but there has been a considerable rejuvenation of interest in the last four years, possibly owing to the fact that performance assessment methodolo­ gy is gradually maturing to the point where it needs the kind of support which analogues can offer. Since 1982, the Commission of the European Communities has been involved in specific work on natural analogues in the framework of its activities on radioactive waste management, principally within the MIRAGE project which concerns migration of radionuclides in the geosphere. As a consequence, the Commission took the initiative, in 1985, of establish­ ing a Natural Analogue Working Group (NAWG) whose members can benefit from the overall expertise available for managing their own natural analogue research programmes. In this group, modeller' s requirements and the results of field research are exchanged at regular intervals. A number of wide-ranging investigation programmes, both on national and international scales. are currently underway or being initiated, and several of these have been discussed recently at the NAWGIncluye bibliografíaIn order to validate predictive models of the very long-term processes which affect the performance of radioactive waste repositories, there has been an increased interest in the information and understanding which can be obtained from studying similar mechanisms in natural systems. These "natural analogues", as they are known in the jargon of waste management, have been studied sporadically for many years, but there has been a considerable rejuvenation of interest in the last four years, possibly owing to the fact that performance assessment methodolo­ gy is gradually maturing to the point where it needs the kind of support which analogues can offer. Since 1982, the Commission of the European Communities has been involved in specific work on natural analogues in the framework of its activities on radioactive waste management, principally within the MIRAGE project which concerns migration of radionuclides in the geosphere. As a consequence, the Commission took the initiative, in 1985, of establish­ ing a Natural Analogue Working Group (NAWG) whose members can benefit from the overall expertise available for managing their own natural analogue research programmes. In this group, modeller' s requirements and the results of field research are exchanged at regular intervals. A number of wide-ranging investigation programmes, both on national and international scales. are currently underway or being initiated, and several of these have been discussed recently at the NAWGAdobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorSubscripción a ELSEVIERRadioactive waste disposalAnalog computer simulationRadioisotopesGeochemistryDisponible en líneahttp://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-94-009-3465-8URN:ISBN:1853331058URN:ISBN:9789401080514URN:ISBN:9789400934658 (Online)Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Radioactive waste disposal
Analog computer simulation
Radioisotopes
Geochemistry
Radioactive waste disposal
Analog computer simulation
Radioisotopes
Geochemistry
spellingShingle Radioactive waste disposal
Analog computer simulation
Radioisotopes
Geochemistry
Radioactive waste disposal
Analog computer simulation
Radioisotopes
Geochemistry
Côme, B. editor
Chapman, N. A. editor/a
Commission of the European communities
Natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal
description In order to validate predictive models of the very long-term processes which affect the performance of radioactive waste repositories, there has been an increased interest in the information and understanding which can be obtained from studying similar mechanisms in natural systems. These "natural analogues", as they are known in the jargon of waste management, have been studied sporadically for many years, but there has been a considerable rejuvenation of interest in the last four years, possibly owing to the fact that performance assessment methodolo­ gy is gradually maturing to the point where it needs the kind of support which analogues can offer. Since 1982, the Commission of the European Communities has been involved in specific work on natural analogues in the framework of its activities on radioactive waste management, principally within the MIRAGE project which concerns migration of radionuclides in the geosphere. As a consequence, the Commission took the initiative, in 1985, of establish­ ing a Natural Analogue Working Group (NAWG) whose members can benefit from the overall expertise available for managing their own natural analogue research programmes. In this group, modeller' s requirements and the results of field research are exchanged at regular intervals. A number of wide-ranging investigation programmes, both on national and international scales. are currently underway or being initiated, and several of these have been discussed recently at the NAWG
format Texto
topic_facet Radioactive waste disposal
Analog computer simulation
Radioisotopes
Geochemistry
author Côme, B. editor
Chapman, N. A. editor/a
Commission of the European communities
author_facet Côme, B. editor
Chapman, N. A. editor/a
Commission of the European communities
author_sort Côme, B. editor
title Natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal
title_short Natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal
title_full Natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal
title_fullStr Natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal
title_full_unstemmed Natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal
title_sort natural analogues in radioactive waste disposal
publisher London, England Graham & Trotman Limited
publishDate 1987
url http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-94-009-3465-8
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