THE PROTOTYPE PLUME BUSTERS SOFTWARE: A NEW TOOL FOR COMPUTER-ASSISTED INSTRUCTION IN SECONDARY AND UNDERGRADUATE-LEVEL EARTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
The environmental consultant has been hired by the pipeline owner to locate the plume and remediate the contaminated aquifer at minimum monetary and time cost and before the contamination reaches the river. To locate the plume, the student places observation wells on a gridded map of the study area and the simulation returns the contaminant concentrations at those locations on the appropriate sample dates. Once the plume is located, the student is able to site pumping and injection wells on the map for aquifer remediation using a simple pump-and-treat technique. The simulation then computes the movement of particles to the pumping wells and returns the cumulative mass removed by the production remediation well.
The accompanying web pages establish the simulated contamination scenario and provide students with background material on ground-water flow and transport principles. To make the role-play more realistic, the student must consider cost and time when making decisions about siting observation wells and wells for the pump-and-treat remediation system. Installation of observation and production or injection wells has associated costs in terms of time and money. The time it takes to complete the remediation also depends on the type of wellfield design selected, well placement with respect to the plume, and the necessity to obtain the required permits for disposal of the treated water to the river or injection back into the aquifer.
Separate high school- and college-undergraduate prototype versions have been developed and are being tested during the 2004-5 academic year using students in earth and environmental science, introductory geology, environmental geology, and hydrogeology classes.