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Fighting water with water: to lift the city, pump the sea beneath Venice.


With technology commonly used in oil fields, engineers say they could inject seawater seawater

Water that makes up the oceans and seas. Seawater is a complex mixture of 96.5% water, 2.5% salts, and small amounts of other substances. Much of the world's magnesium is recovered from seawater, as are large quantities of bromine.
 into sandy strata deep beneath Venice, Italy, to boost the subsiding ground that now aggravates flooding there.

Venice, which is known for its architecture, bridges, and gondola-filled canals, is slowly losing ground. Over the past century, land beneath the city subsided almost 12 centimeters, and the sea level rose almost 11 cm. That net increase in water level significantly exacerbated flooding, says Giuseppe Gambolati, a hydrologist hy·drol·o·gy  
n.
The scientific study of the properties, distribution, and effects of water on the earth's surface, in the soil and underlying rocks, and in the atmosphere.
 at the University of Padua History
The university was founded in 1222 when a large group of students and professors left the University of Bologna in search of more academic freedom. The first subjects to be taught were jurisprudence and theology.
 in Italy.

One government-approved project to protect Venice includes inflatable barriers that will be raised when severe storms boost the water level in the surrounding lagoon more than 1.1 meters above sea level Meters Above Sea Level is a standard metric measurement of the elevation of a location in reference to mean sea level. Uses
Meters above sea level is the standard measurement of the elevation or altitude of:
, says Gambolati. Despite its multibillion-dollar cost, that future system isn't designed to protect Venice against smaller floods. Even when waters reach only 80 cm above sea level--which they do dozens of times annually--the plaza in St. Mark's Square is submerged.

At many sites around the world, the oil-drilling industry injects large volumes of water into petroleum-bearing rocks to increase the pressure there and ease the extraction of oil. That technique often prevents ground overlying overlying

suffocation of piglets by the sow. The piglets may be weak from illness or malnutrition, the sow may be clumsy or ill, the pen may be inadequate in size or poorly designed so that piglets cannot escape.
 the oil from subsiding and sometimes even pushes the ground upward, says Gambolati. In the Sept. 28 Journal of Geophysical Research Journal of Geophysical Research is a publication of the American Geophysical Union. JGR was formerly titled Terrestrial Magnetism from its founding by the AGU's president Louis A.  (Earth Surface), he and his colleagues propose that the technique could reduce the frequency of Venice's flooding.

Several layers of sandstone that contain brackish brack·ish  
adj.
1. Having a somewhat salty taste, especially from containing a mixture of seawater and fresh water: "You could cut the brackish winds with a knife/Here in Nantucket" 
 water lie between 600 and 800 m beneath Venice. Injecting seawater into those porous strata would increase water pressure there, partially relieving the weight of earth above and permitting the rocks to expand. Using a computer model, the researchers found that pumping 35 liters of water per second through each of 12 deep wells located about 5 kilometers from the city, could lift Venice between 11 and 40 cm over the course of a decade.

The most probable scenario is a boost of about 25 cm. Historical sea level data covering more than 140 years suggest that this elevation would reduce the city's flooding above the 1.1-m benchmark by about 90 percent, says Gambolati.

Such a project "sounds plausible," says Gerald W. Bawden, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Sacramento, Calif. Pumping meltwater melt·wa·ter  
n.
Water that comes from melting snow or ice.


meltwater
Noun

melted snow or ice

Noun 1.
 in the springtime from rivers into aquifers in the Los Angeles basin--which stores the water until it's withdrawn later in the year--lifts the surface of the ground in some areas as much as 6 cm (SN: 8/25/01, p. 119), he notes.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:4EUIT
Date:Oct 30, 2004
Words:417
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