Ancient eco-technology of qanats for engineering a sustainable water supply in the Mediterranean Island of Cyprus.
Theodore A.Endreny, Hüseyin Gökçekuş.
- New York : Springer, 2009.
The qanat water supply technology, which gravity drains mountain aquifers into valleys, is considered as a culturally appropriate and ecological sustainable design to meet northern Cyprus' drinking water development needs. This research estimates the boundary and water budget for the proposed qanat recharge area of 370 km(2), which is in the upper elevations of the limestone dominated Five Finger Mountain Range. The mountain drainage was analyzed using global elevation data from the Shuttle Ranging Topography Mission (SRTM). Efforts to use Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) annual precipitation for water budget inputs failed due to extreme error when tested against 10-30 years of meteorological station data; TRMM under-estimated depths on the narrow mountain peaks. Gage records, while few in number, were area averaged to set average annual precipitation inputs at 530 mm year(-1). Evaporation was estimated using a complementary relationship areal evapotranspiration (CRAE) model, setting average atmospheric outputs at 221 mm year(-1). Recharge to the qanat aquifer was set by subtracting evaporation from precipitation, and then allocating 50% of the remaining water to environmental services. At 25% development, the qanat system supplies 14 mm(3) year(-1) of water, meeting the drinking water deficit of 13 mm(3).
0943-0105
000263361600002
Near East University Article Yakın Doğu Üniversitesi Makale Environmental sciences Water Resources Water scarcity Remotely sensed data