
Mobile environmental monitoring system of the Dniester: modeling of technical system of hydro resources and extreme floods
Author(s) -
T. Trysnyuk
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ekologìčna bezpeka ta prirodokoristuvannâ/ekologìčna bezpeka ì prirodokoristuvannâ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2616-2121
pISSN - 2411-4049
DOI - 10.32347/2411-4049.2021.2.121-128
Subject(s) - environmental science , flooding (psychology) , flood myth , terrain , water resource management , environmental monitoring , scale (ratio) , computer science , hydrology (agriculture) , environmental resource management , remote sensing , cartography , geography , environmental engineering , geology , psychology , geotechnical engineering , archaeology , psychotherapist
The mobile environmental monitoring system is aimed at increasing the processing speed of measurement analyzes and increasing the scale of the study. The algorithm of analysis and modeling of extreme floods includes: construction of a series of hydrographic maps of the largest floods and graphs of characteristic water levels, assessment of the peculiarities of floods, formation of a database on channel morphometry and the state of flood objects. An important role is given to the assessment and forecast of the state of the Dniester and anthropogenic impacts on it in connection with such indicators as morbidity and control of pollution caused by flooding. Man-caused ecological safety of use of hydro resources and hydroecosystems in general should be based on the hydroecosystem concept of balanced nature use. GIS technologies (ArcView GIS 3.2a) were used to directly implement the tasks of estimating the time of penetration of pollutants into groundwater. The evaluation of the protective properties of the rocks of the aeration zone was performed by creating a spatial model to determine the relationship between objects using the module Georgesessig ArcGIS. Survey materials allow you to create 3D terrain models with an accuracy of 15–20 cm and aerial mosaics at a scale of 1: 1,000 – 1: 5,000.