Juan José Durán Valsero
Instituto Geológico y Minero de España
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Juan José Durán Valsero.
Ground Water | 2015
Carolina Guardiola-Albert; Sergio Martos-Rosillo; Eulogio Pardo-Igúzquiza; Juan José Durán Valsero; Antonio Pedrera; Pablo Jiménez-Gavilán; Cristina Liñán Baena
Management of water resources, implying their appropriate protection, calls for a sound evaluation of recharge. Such assessment is very complex in karst aquifers. Most methods are developed for application to detrital aquifers, without taking into account the extraordinary heterogeneity of porosity and permeability of karst systems. It is commonly recommended to estimate recharge using multiple methods; however, differences inherent to the diverse methods make it difficult to clarify the accuracy of each result. In this study, recharge was estimated in a karst aquifer working in a natural regime, in a Mediterranean-type climate, in the western part of the Sierra de las Nieves (southern Spain). Mediterranean climate regions are characterized by high inter-annual rainfall variability featuring long dry periods and short intense wet periods, the latter constituting the most important contribution to aquifer water input. This paper aims to identify the methods that provide the most plausible range of recharge rate during wet periods. Six methods were tested: the classical method of Thornthwaite-Mather, the Visual Balan code, the chloride balance method, and spatially distributed methods such as APLIS, a novel spatiotemporal estimation of recharge, and ZOODRM. The results help determine valid methods for application in the rest of the unit of study and in similar karst aquifers.
Journal of Environmental Management | 2018
Luis Moreno Merino; Núria Imbern Fernández; Juan José Durán Valsero; Héctor Aguilera
Concentrating solar power plants (CSPPs) are considered to be particularly respectful of the environment but under Mediterranean climate where surface water scarcity is a key issue, these types of electrical plants usually require groundwater for their cooling towers and use the same aquifers to discharge their salinized effluents. This study analyses de Spanish case, where fifteen out of the fifty active CSPPs use groundwater directly, four discharge their effluents to infiltration ponds and forty-three to surface watercourses most of which recharge underlying aquifers. The volume of water withdrawn and discharged varies greatly among similar plants. The salinity of the effluent exceeds 2.5 times that of the withdrawn water in half of the plants and it may alter the current or potential use of the water turning it unsuitable for drinking or even for irrigation. There is a risk that the impact on groundwater can be extended to related ecosystems such as wetlands. This can become a serious environmental problem, but specific impacts on groundwater are often overlooked in environmental impact assessments of CSPPs and no research on the matter has been reported so far. Other legal and political implications of CSPPs are further discussed.
Ground Water | 2018
Sergio Martos-Rosillo; Carolina Guardiola-Albert; Alberto Padilla Benítez; Joaquín Delgado Pastor; Antonio Azcón González; Juan José Durán Valsero
The correct characterization of aquifer parameters is essential for water-supply and water-quality investigations. Slug tests are widely used for these purposes. While free software is available to interpret slug tests, some codes are not user-friendly, or do not include a wide range of methods to interpret the results, or do not include automatic, inverse solutions to the test data. The private sector has also generated several good programs to interpret slug test data, but they are not free of charge. The computer program SlugIn 1.0 is available online for free download, and is demonstrated to aid in the analysis of slug tests to estimate hydraulic parameters. The program provides an easy-to-use Graphical User Interface. SlugIn 1.0 incorporates automated parameter estimation and facilitates the visualization of several interpretations of the same test. It incorporates solutions for confined and unconfined aquifers, partially penetrating wells, skin effects, shape factor, anisotropy, high hydraulic conductivity formations and the Mace test for large-diameter wells. It is available in English and Spanish and can be downloaded from the web site of the Geological Survey of Spain. Two field examples are presented to illustrate how the software operates.
Boletín geológico y minero | 2001
Alfonso Arribas Herrera; José Antonio Riquelme Cantal; Paul Palmqvist; Guiomar Garrido Alvarez-Coto; Román Hernández Manchado; César Laplana Conesa; Jesús Miguel Soria Mingorance; César Viseras Alarcón; Juan José Durán Valsero; Pablo Gumiel Martínez; Fernando Robles Cuenca; Jerónimo López Martínez; José Sebastián Carrión García
Boletín geológico y minero | 2004
Silvia Blanco Ferrera; Juan Carlos Gumiel Gutiérrez; María Dolores Bermúdez Medina; César Viseras Alarcón; Jesús Miguel Soria Mingorance; Juan José Durán Valsero; G. Garrido; E. Baeza; R. Hernández; Alfonso Arribas Herrera
Acta Carsologica | 2013
Eulogio Pardo-Igúzquiza; Juan José Durán Valsero; P. A. Dowd
Cuadernos de investigación geográfica / Geographical Research Letters | 1984
Juan José Durán Valsero
Boletín geológico y minero | 2004
Juan José Durán Valsero; Francisco Carrasco Cantos; J. Vías; Juan Antonio López Geta; Bartolomé Andreo Navarro
Geogaceta | 1999
José Manuel González Casado; Jerónimo López-Martínez; Jorge Luis Giner-Robles; Juan José Durán Valsero; P. Gumiel Garrido
Boletín geológico y minero | 2004
Miguel Angel Mancheño Jiménez; Jerónimo López-Martínez; Juan José Durán Valsero