Natural Attenuation of Groundwater Contaminants: New Paradigms, Technologies, and Applications

Rice University
via Coursera
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Cleaning up the large number of groundwater contamination sites is a significant and complex environmental challenge. The environmental industry is continuously looking for remediation methods that are both effective and cost-efficient. Over the past 10 years there have been amazing, important developments in our understanding of key attenuation processes and technologies for evaluating natural attenuation processes, and a changing institutional perspective on when and where Monitored Natural Attenuation (MNA) may be applied. Despite these advances, restoring groundwater contaminated by anthropogenic sources to allow for unrestricted use continues to be a challenge. Because of a complex mix of physical, chemical, and biological constraints associated with active in-situ cleanup technologies, there has been a long standing focus on understanding natural processes that attenuate groundwater contaminant plumes.

Instructor(s)

Pedro Alvarez, Charles Newell, David Adamson
Rice University
via Coursera
Free (audit)
English
Paid Certificate Available
Approx. 28 hours to complete
Self paced
Advanced Level
Subtitles: Subtitles: French, Portuguese (European), Russian, English, Spanish