FORECASTING DRINKING-WATER RISKS IN KARSTIC TERRANES
Forecasting environmental and human health risks to drinking-water supplies in karstic terranes are best accomplished by conducting numerous quantitative-tracer tests from each potential source location to each exposure point so that acceptable solute-transport parameters may be estimated from analyses of the breakthrough curves. Breakthrough curves developed from quantitative tracer tests are readily amenable to numerical analyses and modeling efforts which yield basic solute fate-and-transport parameters such as time-of-travel, velocity, dispersion, and decay. Alternatively, pollutant fate-and-transport parameters may be estimated using basic measured field parameters combined in functional relationships and applied in the advection-dispersion model. Once these parameters are established, the models can be run to generate a time history of concentrations at exposure points which feed directly into the exposure assessments.
The estimated exposures may then be used to forecast risks. Calculated exposures and subsequent risks will still depend on the type of release (discrete or continuous) and whether the substance is a chemical or biological agent. If a biological agent is released, then it may also be necessary to assess the capability of the biological agent to be transmitted as a disease through a population via person-to-person contact.