NGI contaminated shooting range with 300 tons of gravel
NGI devised an original system to reduce the contamination in the runoff of a shooting range. They covered a severely contaminated shooting range (642 m2) with 300 tons of gravel (25 cm) to give a shortcut to the groundwater of the contaminated area, thus reducing the transport of inorganic contaminants. The project is linked to the OSPAR commission: Protecting the marine environment from land-based pollution and urban run-off (https://www.ospar.org/about)Smart Water, Smart Water Xtreme and Smart Agriculture devices installed
Shooting range soils often contain high levels of lead (Pb) and antimony (Sb) that arise from the weathering of spent bullets. The highest Pb and Sb concentrations are usually found near bullet traps, however, due to weathering of spent bullets and metal mobility, the pollution can persist for hundreds of years. Both types of pollutants result in a large problem with respect to the contamination of water and soils. This source of pollution is highly diffuse and hard to locate because it originates in large areas. They needed to monitor the impact on the hydrology and water chemistry to see if the solution was effective. They used Libelium IoT devices because it was crucial to have high quality sensors to know the water chemistry.Diagram of the project
They wanted to see if it was possible to maintain the accuracy of water chemistry parameters over time, i.e., that drift was low enough. They combined this monitoring with the development of passive samplers that capture variations in water chemistry parameters such as lead concentration. The sensors communicate via 4G with NGI’s own cloud, where they designed a dashboard with the “R” programming language. “The Libelium recorders allow us to acquire high-resolution time series of accurate and precise sensors as valuable decision support for our remediation measures”, says Andreas Botnen Smebye, Environmental Geologist at Norwegian Geotechnical Institute (NGI). Thanks to the measurements made by the Libelium water sensor platform they observed that the total lead concentrations were ~40% lower after the actions carried out at the range.This case study helps to achieve the following Sustainable Development Goals:
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