201 results on '"Tivadar, M."'
Search Results
2. Heterogeneous water distribution in between peridotite xenoliths from Kaapvaal Craton kimberlites: Constraints on diamond barren nature of kimberlites
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Khan, Sahroz, Liptai, Nóra, Kovács, István J., Fedortchouk, Yana, and Tóth, Tivadar M.
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- 2025
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3. Multiple linear regression and gene expression programming to predict fracture density from conventional well logs of basement metamorphic rocks
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Muhammad Luqman Hasan and Tivadar M. Tóth
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Fractured reservoir ,Fracture density ,Multiple linear regression ,Well-logging ,Gene expression programming ,Metamorphic basement ,Petroleum refining. Petroleum products ,TP690-692.5 ,Petrology ,QE420-499 - Abstract
Abstract Fracture identification and evaluation requires data from various resources, such as image logs, core samples, seismic data, and conventional well logs for a meaningful interpretation. However, several wells have some missing data; for instance, expensive cost run for image logs, cost concern for core samples, and occasionally unsuccessful core retrieving process. Thus, a majority of the current research is focused on predicting fracture based on conventional well log data. Interpreting fractures information is very important especially to develop reservoir model and to plan for drilling and field development. This study employed statistical methods such as multiple linear regression (MLR), principal component analysis (PCA), and gene expression programming (GEP) to predict fracture density from conventional well log data. This study explored three wells from a basement metamorphic rock with ten conventional logs of gamma rays, thorium, potassium, uranium, deep resistivity, flushed zone resistivity, bulk density, neutron porosity, sonic porosity, and photoelectric effect. Four different methods were used to predict the fracture density, and the results show that predicting fracture density is possible using MLR, PCA, and GEP. However, GEP predicted the best fracture density with R2 > 0.86 for all investigated wells, although it had limited use in predicting fracture density. All methods used highlighted that flushed zone resistivity and uranium content are the two most significant well log parameters to predict fracture density. GEP was efficient for use in metamorphic rocks as it works well for conventional well log data as the data is nonlinear, and GEP uses nonlinear algorithms.
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- 2024
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4. Using geophysical log data to predict the fracture density in a claystone host rock for storing high-level nuclear waste
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Tóth, Emese, Hrabovszki, Ervin, and Tóth, Tivadar M.
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- 2023
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5. Transforming Abandoned Hydrocarbon Fields into Heat Storage Solutions: A Hungarian Case Study Using Enhanced Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis–Analytic Hierarchy Process and Geostatistical Methods
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Hawkar Ali Abdulhaq, János Geiger, István Vass, Tivadar M. Tóth, Tamás Medgyes, and János Szanyi
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geothermal energy ,Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage (ATES) ,abandoned underground heat storage ,hydrocarbon fields ,Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) ,data modeling ,Technology - Abstract
This study introduces a robust methodology utilizing Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) combined with an Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) to repurpose abandoned hydrocarbon fields for energy storage, supporting the transition to renewable energy sources. We use a geostatistical approach integrated with Python scripting to analyze reservoir parameters—including porosity, permeability, thickness, lithology, temperature, heat capacity, and thermal conductivity—from a decommissioned hydrocarbon field in Southeast Hungary. Our workflow leverages stochastic simulation data to identify potential zones for energy storage, categorizing them into high-, moderate-, and low-suitability scenarios. This innovative approach provides rapid and precise analysis, enabling effective decision-making for energy storage implementation in depleted fields. The key finding is the development of a methodology that can quickly and accurately assess the feasibility of repurposing abandoned hydrocarbon reservoirs for underground thermal energy storage, offering a practical solution for sustainable energy transition.
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- 2024
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6. Granite alteration as the origin of high lithium content of groundwater in southeast Hungary
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Jancsek, Krisztián, Janovszky, Patrick, Galbács, Gábor, and Tóth, Tivadar M.
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- 2023
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7. Reconstruction of magma chamber processes preserved in olivine-phlogopite micro-ijolites from the Oldoinyo Lengai, Tanzania
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Halász, Noémi, Berkesi, Márta, Tóth, Tivadar M., Mitchell, Roger H., Milke, Ralf, and Guzmics, Tibor
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- 2023
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8. Discrete fracture network (DFN) modelling of a high-level radioactive waste repository host rock and the effects on its hydrogeological behaviour
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Tóth, Emese, Hrabovszki, Ervin, Schubert, Félix, and Tóth, Tivadar M.
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- 2022
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9. Geochemical and microtextural properties of veins in a potential high-level radioactive waste disposal site
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Hrabovszki, Ervin, Tóth, Emese, Tóth, Tivadar M., Garaguly, István, Futó, István, Máthé, Zoltán, and Schubert, Félix
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- 2022
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10. Confocal Raman spectroscopic study of melt inclusions from peridotite xenoliths in economic and barren kimberlites from Kaapvaal Craton.
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Khan, Sahroz, Fedortchouk, Yana, Feichter, Monika, and Toth, Tivadar M.
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KIMBERLITE ,INCLUSIONS in igneous rocks ,METASOMATISM ,RAMAN spectroscopy ,RESORPTION (Physiology) ,ALKALINE earth metals ,OLIVINE - Abstract
Melt inclusions trapped in minerals inside xenoliths from kimberlites can help to examine the composition of kimberlite melt and/or metasomatic processes in the subcratonic lithospheric mantle as well as shed more light on the role of these melts in diamond destruction. In this study, confocal Raman spectroscopy of secondary melt inclusions in olivine from xenoliths in five different Kaapvaal Craton kimberlites was used for testing any compositional differences between melt inclusions from economically productive (Bultfontein and Frank Smit) and uneconomic diamond barren (Matsoku, Thaba Putsoa, and Pipe 200) kimberlite pipes. The xenoliths represent a range of pressures (37–45 kbar) and temperatures (1000–1300°C). The 26 daughter minerals identified within melt inclusions include Ca–Mg (±Na, K, P, Cl)‐bearing carbonates, alkali (±Ca, Ba, Cl, F, H2O, CO2)‐bearing sulfates, phosphates, oxides, silicates, and a rare nitrate. The mineral assemblages in melt inclusions are similar in both economic and barren kimberlite pipes from the interior and the edge of the craton, indicating the similar composition of the entrapped melts in all studied samples. However, the petrographic study revealed different metasomatic processes recorded by xenoliths from barren and economic kimberlites. Metasomatism by a melt enriched in K, Ca, and H2O could be instrumental in diamond destruction and the low diamond grade of the three barren kimberlites from Lesotho. Our study revealed no effect of kimberlite melt composition on diamond preservation in the studied kimberlites: instead, diamond grade is most likely affected by diamond destruction in the mantle source prior to kimberlite emplacement with kimberlite ascent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Shear strain and volume change associated with sigmoidal vein arrays in the Boda Claystone
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Tóth, Emese, Hrabovszki, Ervin, Tóth, Tivadar M., and Schubert, Félix
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- 2020
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12. Potential formation mechanisms of early diagenetic displacive veins in the Permian Boda Claystone Formation
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Hrabovszki, Ervin, Tóth, Emese, Tóth, Tivadar M., Máthé, Zoltán, and Schubert, Félix
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- 2020
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13. Fracture Density Prediction of Basement Metamorphic Rocks Using Gene Expression Programming
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Hasan, Muhammad Luqman, primary and Tóth, Tivadar M., additional
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- 2024
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14. Measuring Environmental Inequalities: Insights from the Residential Segregation Literature
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Schaeffer, Y. and Tivadar, M.
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- 2019
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15. Transforming Abandoned Hydrocarbon Fields into Heat Storage Solutions: A Hungarian Case Study Using Enhanced Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis–Analytic Hierarchy Process and Geostatistical Methods.
- Author
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Abdulhaq, Hawkar Ali, Geiger, János, Vass, István, Tóth, Tivadar M., Medgyes, Tamás, and Szanyi, János
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HEAT storage ,ANALYTIC hierarchy process ,MULTIPLE criteria decision making ,RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) ,DECISION making - Abstract
This study introduces a robust methodology utilizing Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) combined with an Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) to repurpose abandoned hydrocarbon fields for energy storage, supporting the transition to renewable energy sources. We use a geostatistical approach integrated with Python scripting to analyze reservoir parameters—including porosity, permeability, thickness, lithology, temperature, heat capacity, and thermal conductivity—from a decommissioned hydrocarbon field in Southeast Hungary. Our workflow leverages stochastic simulation data to identify potential zones for energy storage, categorizing them into high-, moderate-, and low-suitability scenarios. This innovative approach provides rapid and precise analysis, enabling effective decision-making for energy storage implementation in depleted fields. The key finding is the development of a methodology that can quickly and accurately assess the feasibility of repurposing abandoned hydrocarbon reservoirs for underground thermal energy storage, offering a practical solution for sustainable energy transition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Lithology-Controlled Hydrodynamic Behaviour of a Fractured Sandstone–Claystone Body in a Radioactive Waste Repository Site, SW Hungary
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Emese Tóth, Ervin Hrabovszki, Félix Schubert, and Tivadar M. Tóth
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DFN modelling ,fracture network ,fracture aperture ,flow zone indicator ,high-level radioactive waste repository ,Boda Claystone Formation ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The fracture network modelling and hydrogeological assessment were performed in an 845 m deep borehole of the potential high-level waste repository formation and its caprock. The geometry of the fracture network was simulated using the discrete fracture network (DFN) modelling method, which is based on the geometric characteristics of the individual fractures. The hydrogeological evaluation was based on changes in porosity and permeability along the borehole using flow zone indicator (FZI) values that denote hydraulic flow units (HFU) within the rock body. Fracture network characteristics and hydrogeological features are mainly determined by the wellbore lithology, which can be divided into three zones. The sandstone body was intersected in the upper 300 m of the borehole, which forms a single HFU. The second zone was developed along with the transition zone between the sandstone and the underlying claystone bodies. Here the predominant rock type is claystone, but the characteristics of the fracture network are distinctly different from the deeper parts of this rock body. Below 400 m is the third zone, where distinct and extensive HFU-s could not form, probably due to different water–rock interaction processes that could have changed the porosity and permeability from point to point in the claystone.
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- 2022
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17. Natural amenity-driven segregation: Evidence from location choices in French metropolitan areas
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Schaeffer, Y., Cremer-Schulte, D., Tartiu, C., and Tivadar, M.
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- 2016
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18. Localisation of Ancient Migration Pathways inside a Fractured Metamorphic Hydrocarbon Reservoir in South-East Hungary
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Tivadar M. Tóth, László Molnár, Sándor Körmös, Nóra Czirbus, and Félix Schubert
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Pannonian Basin ,fractured reservoir ,well-log ,DFN modelling ,fluid inclusion chemostratigraphy ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Numerous fractured hydrocarbon reservoirs exist in the metamorphic basement of the Pannonian Basin in Hungary. Many decades of experience in production have proven that these reservoirs are highly compartmentalised, resulting in a complex mosaic of permeable and impermeable domains situated next to each other. Consequently, in most fields, only a small amount of the total hydrocarbon reserve can be extracted. This paper aims to locate the potential migration pathways inside the most productive basement reservoir of the Pannonian Basin, using a multiscale approach. To achieve this, evaluation well-log data, DFN modelling and a composition analysis of fluid trapped in a vein-filling zeolite phase are combined. Data on a single well are presented as an example. The results of the three approaches indicate the presence of two highly fractured intervals separated by a barely fractured amphibolite. The two zones are probably part of the communicating fracture system inside the single metamorphic mass. The gas analysis further specifies the migrated fluids and indicates hydrocarbons of a composition similar to that of the recently produced oil. Consequently, we conclude that the two zones do not only form an ancient migration pathway but are also members of a more recent hydrocarbon system.
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- 2020
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19. Evaluation and optimization of multi-lateral wells using MODFLOW unstructured grids
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Lux Marcell, Szanyi János, and Tóth Tivadar M
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voronoi grid ,fishbone well ,hydrodynamic modelling ,drawdown minimization ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Multi-lateral wells have been increasingly used in recent years by different industries including oil- and gas industry along with coal bed methane- and water production. The common purpose of these wells is to achieve a higher production rate per well. More and more sophisticated well patterns and geometries can be implemented in practice which calls for improved modelling techniques. Complicated well geometries and small lateral diameters require high resolution models in the vicinity of the wells. With structured finite difference grids this can only be achieved by unnecessary refinements even far away from the wellbores. However the model may still suffer from orientation problems if laterals do not coincide with the rows or columns of the rectangular mesh.
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- 2016
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20. Structural controls on petroleum migration and entrapment within the faulted basement blocks of Szeghalom Dome (Pannonian Basin, SE Hungary)
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Lászlo Molnár, Tivadar M. Tóth, and Félix Schubert
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Fractured reservoir, Variscan basment, Fault zones, Well-log interpretation, Fault rock analysis ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
The basement of the Pannonian Basin contains several fractured metamorphic hydrocarbon reservoirs that typically form structural highs between the Neogene sedimentary sub-basins. One of the largest reservoirs, the Szeghalom Dome, is located on the northern margin of the Békés Basin and is mainly composed of Variscan gneisses and amphibolites with different metamorphic evolutions. These petrologically incompatible blocks were juxtaposed by post-metamorphic tectonic activity that was accompanied by the formation of brittle fault zones with elevated transmissibilities. The aim of this study was to define the spatial arrangement of these fault zones and their internal architecture by integrated evaluations of borecore and well-log data from a group of wells in the central part of the field. Spatial correlations between the reconstructed 1D lithologic columns revealed the main structural elements of the Szeghalom Dome. The low-angle (<15°) thrust faults most likely developed due to north-northwest vergent Cretaceous nappe tectonics, which was probably responsible for the juxtaposition of the different metamorphic blocks. A complex system of normal faults throughout the basement high provides evidence of intense Miocene extensional tectonic activity. This phase of the geodynamical evolution of the basin is believed to be responsible for the horst-graben structure of the Szeghalom Dome. The integration of the structural results with datasets of the paleo-fluid evolution, recent production and fracture network geometry indicates the importance of these fault zones in both the migration of hydrocarbons from the adjacent sub-basins to the overlying sediments and the development of significant storage capacity within the strongly fractured rock masses (mainly the amphibolite bodies). These observations of fluid flow also emphasized the impact of strong permeability anisotropy of the faults throughout the fractured reservoir.
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- 2015
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21. Mineralogical and Geochemical Constraints of the REE Accumulation in the Almásfüzitő Red Mud Depository in Northwest Hungary
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Tivadar M. Tóth, Félix Schubert, Béla Raucsik, and Krisztián Fintor
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red mud ,bauxite processing residue ,rare earth elements ,cancrinite ,goethite ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Detailed mineralogical and geochemical study of red mud samples from Hungary suggests geological and geochemical processes that determine the spatial distribution of certain elements inside the red mud pitfalls. The major processes are the following: (1) Heavy mineral grains (anatase, rutile, titanomagnetite, etc.) tend to subside due to gravitational differentiation and at present accumulate in the deepest horizons of the pitfalls. (2) Kaolinite reacts to cancrinite under hyperalkaline conditions. (3) Due to diagenetic processes, goethite-cancrinite aggregates form in situ. (4) Light mineral grains (e.g., cancrinite) move upward. (5) Cancrinite transforms to calcite at the shallowest horizons, due probably to the reaction with atmospheric CO2. All these processes have a significant role in accumulation tendencies of different groups of elements inside the pitfalls. The behaviour of chalcophile elements and the HFSE elements follow common geochemical rules and remind features of the host bauxite or even its precursor igneous or metamorphic lithologies. The REEs and Sc are possibly adsorbed on goethite and in the channels of cancrinite. Based on linear mixing model calculations, the major container of these elements is cancrinite. The proportion of the REEs and Sc in the Ti-phases, carbonates, phosphates, zircon, etc. is subordinate relative to the amount accumulated by goethite and cancrinite.
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- 2019
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22. Bio-mining of Lanthanides from Red Mud by Green Microalgae
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Mária Čížková, Dana Mezricky, Marian Rucki, Tivadar M. Tóth, Vít Náhlík, Vojtěch Lanta, Kateřina Bišová, Vilém Zachleder, and Milada Vítová
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microalgae ,lanthanides ,red mud ,bio-mining ,recovery ,toxicity ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
Red mud is a by-product of alumina production containing lanthanides. Growth of green microalgae on red mud and the intracellular accumulation of lanthanides was tested. The best growing species was Desmodesmus quadricauda (2.71 cell number doublings/day), which accumulated lanthanides to the highest level (27.3 mg/kg/day), if compared with Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Parachlorella kessleri (2.50, 2.37 cell number doublings and 24.5, 12.5 mg/kg per day, respectively). With increasing concentrations of red mud, the growth rate decreased (2.71, 2.62, 2.43 cell number doublings/day) due to increased shadowing of cells by undissolved red mud particles. The accumulated lanthanide content, however, increased in the most efficient alga Desmodesmus quadricauda within 2 days from zero in red-mud free culture to 12.4, 39.0, 54.5 mg/kg of dry mass at red mud concentrations of 0.03, 0.05 and 0.1%, respectively. Red mud alleviated the metal starvation caused by cultivation in incomplete nutrient medium without added microelements. Moreover, the proportion of lanthanides in algae grown in red mud were about 250, 138, 117% higher than in culture grown in complete nutrient medium at red mud concentrations of 0.03, 0.05, 0.1%. Thus, green algae are prospective vehicles for bio-mining or bio-leaching of lanthanides from red mud.
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- 2019
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23. The Hydraulic Behavior of a Crack-Seal Vein-Producing Fluid-Rock System
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Dabi, Gergely, Czuppon, György, Schubert, Félix, and Tóth, Tivadar M.
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- 2013
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24. Contrasting metamorphic and post-metamorphic evolutions within the Algyő basement high (Tisza Mega-unit, SE Hungary). Consequences for structural history
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Tivadar M. Tóth and Henrietta Kondor
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Basement (geology) ,Metamorphic rock ,Geochemistry ,Geology ,Mega ,Unit (housing) - Abstract
The Algyő High (AH) is an elevated crystalline block in southeastern Hungary covered by thick Neogene sediments. Although productive hydrocarbon reservoirs are found in these Neogene sequences, numerous fractured reservoirs also occur in the pre-Neogene basement of the Pannonian Basin. Based on these analogies, the rock body of the AH might also play a key role in fluid storage and migration; however, its structure and therefore the reservoir potential is little known. Based on a comprehensive petrologic study in conjunction with analysis of the spatial position of the major lithologies, the AH is considered to have been assembled from blocks with different petrographic features and metamorphic history. The most common lithologies of garnet-kyanite gneiss and mica schist associated with garnetiferous amphibolite are dominant in the northwestern and southeastern parts of the AH. The first regional amphibolite facies metamorphism of the gneiss and mica schist was overprinted by a contact metamorphic (metasomatic) event during decompression in the stability field of kyanite. Garnet-bearing amphibolite experienced amphibolite facies peak conditions comparable with the host gneiss. Regarding the similarities in petrologic features, the northwestern and southeastern parts of the area represent disaggregated blocks of the same rock body. The central part of the AH area is characterized by an epidote gneiss-dominated block metamorphosed along with a greenschist-facies retrograde pathway as well as a chlorite schist-dominated block formed by greenschist-facies progressive metamorphism. The independent evolution of these two blocks is further confirmed by the presence of a propylitic overprint in the chlorite schists. The different metamorphic blocks of the northwestern, southeastern and central parts of the AH probably became juxtaposed along post-metamorphic normal faults developed due to extensional processes. The supposed brittle structural boundaries between the blocks could have provided hydrocarbon migration pathways from the adjacent over-pressured sub-basins, or could even represent suitable reservoirs.
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- 2021
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25. Geochemistry of the Görcsöny Ridge amphibolites (Tisza Unit, SW Hungary) and its geodynamic consequences
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Tivadar M. Toth
- Subjects
Tisza plate, Variscan orogeny, amphibolite geochemistry ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
The Görcsöny Ridge is part of the complicated Variscan metamorphic basement of the SW Tisza plate. It was penetrated by several wells, one of which (Baksa-2) explored 1200 m borecore available for petrological examination. Amphibolite samples of this core are of two different sorts: one sort contains biotite, rutile, and garnet, while the other contains ilmenite and is free of garnet. The two rock types occur separately along the borehole, defining a lower and an upper unit (LU, UU). Based on their major and trace element compositions, LU samples are within-plate (WP) tholeiites which assimilated pelagic sediments, while those of the UU represent WP alkali basalts. Thermobarometric calculations suggest that the difference in chemical composition itself does not explain the above differences in mineralogy, so the two units must also differ in their metamorphic histories. Consequently, the crystalline basement of the Görcsöny Ridge possibly consists of amalgamated fragments of different origins and evolutions which became juxtaposed during the Variscan collisional orogeny.
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- 2014
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26. Classification of minerals and the assessment of lithium and beryllium content in granitoid rocks by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy
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Béla Hopp, Dávid J. Palásti, Gábor Galbács, Tivadar M. Tóth, Judit Kopniczky, Krisztián Jancsek, and Patrick Janovszky
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Mineral ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Mineralogy ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Linear discriminant analysis ,Feldspar ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,visual_art ,engineering ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Prospecting ,Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy ,0210 nano-technology ,Quartz ,Spectroscopy ,Geology ,Biotite ,Amphibole - Abstract
This study demonstrates that LIBS mapping and spatially resolved local analysis is an efficient and practical approach for the classification of mineral grains (quartz, feldspar, biotite, amphibole) and for prospecting of technologically relevant, low-Z elements (e.g. Be and Li) in granitoid rock samples. We tested three statistical approaches (classification tree (CT) based on indicator elements, linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and random forest (RF)) for the classification of the mineral grains and found that each of the three methods provides fairly similar, very good classification accuracies. RF and LDA provided better than 92% accuracy for all minerals, whereas CT showed a somewhat poorer (around 80%) accuracy for quartz in particular. Our results also demonstrate that using multiple analytical locations within each grain and resting the classification on the majority vote of these individual analysis gives more reliable discrimination (grain-based accuracy is better than location-based accuracy). We also demonstrated that LIBS elemental mapping can provide valuable information about the distribution of chemical elements among the minerals, especially if it is combined with matrix-matched calibration of emission intensity data. We illustrated this by the successful assessment of ng to μg amounts of Be and Li in the studied mineral grains. Our results suggest that mining for Be and Li in granitoid rocks should be aiming for biotite and amphibole grains.
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- 2021
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27. GraphClus, a MATLAB program for cluster analysis using graph theory.
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Clifford S. Todd, Tivadar M. Toth, and Róbert Busa-Fekete
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- 2009
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28. Palaeofluid evolution in a fractured basalt hosted reservoir in the Üllés-Ruzsa-Bordány area, southern sector of the Pannonian Basin
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Barbara Szabó, Félix Schubert, Tivadar M. Tóth, and Gábor Steinbach
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fractured basalt reservoir, Pannonian Basin, zeolite minerals, fluid inclusion, hydrocarbon-bearing fluid inclusions, fluorescence ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Extensive Miocene volcanic activity produced basaltic and pyroclastic successions, which were penetrated by many wells in the area of Üllés-Ruzsa-Bordány, in the western and central part of the Great Hungarian Plain. The Kecel Basalt comprises primary porosity from a high proportion of vesicles and significant secondary fracture porosity, as well. Due to the significant fracture porosity, some depth intervals show good reservoir characteristics, although the fractures crosscutting the rock body are partly or entirely cemented by various minerals. Based on the textural and mineralogical features, four distinct vein types can be distinguished, named after their volumetrically most abundant cement phases, i.e. potassium-feldspar (Kfp-), calcite (Cal-), laumontite (Lmt-) and analcime (Anl-) types. This study focuses on probably the youngest of these vein types, the Anl-type. Based on the study of veins and mineral sequences, the direction of temperature changes cannot be given unequivocally for every stage of cementation, but crystallization of the Anl-type veins might have occurred at lower temperatures than the formation of the Lmt-type veins. Fluid inclusion studies suggest that hydrocarbon migration and accumulation took place after cementation of the first three vein types (Kfp-, Cal- and Lmt-types). In the newly opened fracture system, two types of hydrocarbon (HC1 and HC2)-bearing fluid inclusion assemblages were captured during precipitation of analcime and later zeolites. This refers to two stages of hydrocarbon migration in the fracture system. Observations of the fluorescence colours and low temperature behaviours of the hydrocarbon-bearing inclusions, the earlier HC1 petroleum-inclusions captured heavier (presumably less mature oils), while the later ones (HC2) lighter (presumably more mature) oils. The HC2 petroleum seems to be very similar to the crude oil sampled in a well in the area based on their fluorescence parameters.
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- 2016
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29. PSDR4 OUIGEF -Outils innovants pour une gestion concertée des forêts
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Fuhr, M., Becquey, Jacques, Berger, Frédéric, Bock, Jerome, Bourhis, Fabien, Dubus, Nathalie, Emsellem, Karine, Monnet, Jean-Matthieu, Munoz, Alain, Paccard, Pierre, Peyrache-Gadeau, Véronique, Riond, Catherine, Tivadar, M., Laboratoire des EcoSystèmes et des Sociétés en Montagne (UR LESSEM), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Centre National de la Propriété Forestière (CNPF-IDF), ONF-DTCB-Pôle R&D, Office national des forêts (ONF), PNRC SAINT PIERRE DE CHARTREUSE, Partenaires IRSTEA, Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA), Études des Structures, des Processus d’Adaptation et des Changements de l’Espace (ESPACE), Université Nice Sophia Antipolis (1965 - 2019) (UNS), COMUE Université Côte d'Azur (2015-2019) (COMUE UCA)-COMUE Université Côte d'Azur (2015-2019) (COMUE UCA)-Avignon Université (AU)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Côte d'Azur (UCA), Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA), Parc Naturel Régional du Massif des Bauges, Environnements, Dynamiques et Territoires de Montagne (EDYTEM), Université Savoie Mont Blanc (USMB [Université de Savoie] [Université de Chambéry])-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and soutien financier accordé par le 4e programme PSDR (INRAE, Union Européenne) dans le cadre du projet « OUIGEF »
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Co-building between research and management ,Collaborative management ,Co-construction acteurs chercheurs ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,Ecosystem services ,Gestion concertée ,Services écosystémiques ,Forest resource ,Ressource forestière - Abstract
Ce numéro regroupe des textes issus des projets ayant travaillé dans le cadre du Programme PSDR 4, sous l’égide d’INRAE et de 10 Régions françaises.; Forests provide multiple services, which sometimes lead to contradictory management issues. The OUIGEF project tested, in three territories of the Auvergne Rhône Alpes region (Massif des Bauges, Chartreuse and Pilat Regional Parks), innovative technical or organizational tools for sustainable forest management reconciling these issues. Forest resource was evaluated by airborne LiDAR on the Grande Chartreuse Forest. The methods developed makes it possible to extract essential parameters for forest management with accurate precision, in a continuous and homogeneous manner. Accessibility to the resource was evaluated using the SYLVACCESS tool. Forests with a protection function were mapped and a field protocol to identify mature forests was finalized. The motivation of private forest owners to log their forests was modelled, integrating both the sociodemographic characteristics of the owners and the biophysical characteristics of their forest plot. The valuation circuits of local wood were analyzed, questioning the processes that build the value of local wood. A first focus dealt with a wood energy platform in the Massif des Bauges PNR, a second showed how the process of building the AOC Bois de Chartreuse, while economically enhancing a local resource, also shed light on the "non-market" values of this resource for the territory. Co-constructed with all forestry stakeholders, an analysis grid evaluates the functions of a forest before it is harvested. The diagnosis helps the manager in choosing appropriate harvesting methods. Downstream, the grid evaluates the quality of the harvesting operation. An online educational game follows the path of a wood chip, from its mobilization in the forest to its combustion, and raises the awareness to the construction of a sustainable wood energy sector. A geo-catalogue gathers information on the data used by researchers and actors involved in forest management. An instruction manual for the use of the data adapted to concrete problems faced by forestry stakeholders is joined.; La forêt rend de multiples services, à l’origine d’enjeux de gestion parfois contradictoires. Le projet OUIGEF a testé, sur trois territoires de la région Auvergne Rhône-Alpes (PNR du Massif des Bauges, de la Chartreuse et du Pilat), des outils techniques ou organisationnels innovants, au service d’une gestion forestière durable conciliant ces enjeux. La ressource forestière a été évaluée par un LiDAR aéroporté sur la Forêt Domaniale de Grande Chartreuse. Les chaines de traitement d’images développées ont permis d’extraire des paramètres essentiels pour la gestion forestière avec précision, de manière continue et homogène. L’accessibilité à la ressource a été évaluée à l’aide de l’outil SYLVACCESS, une cartographie des forêts à fonction de protection a été réalisée et un protocole de terrain pour identifier les forêts matures finalisé. a motivation des propriétaires forestiers privés à exploiter leurs forêts a été modélisée, en prenant en compte les caractéristiques sociodémographiques des propriétaires ainsi que les caractéristiques biophysiques de leur parcelle. Les circuits de valorisation du bois local ont été analysés, en questionnant les processus par lesquels la valeur du bois local se construit. Un premier focus a porté sur la création d’une plate-forme Bois Energie, un second a montré comment le processus de construction de l’AOC Bois de Chartreuse, tout en valorisant économiquement une ressource locale a aussi éclairé les valeurs « hors-marché » de cette ressource. Co-construite avec l’ensemble des acteurs forestiers, une grille d’analyse évalue, en amont d’une exploitation forestière, les fonctions d’une forêt. Le diagnostic oriente le gestionnaire pour choisir des modalités d’exploitation appropriées. En aval, la grille évalue la qualité du chantier d’exploitation réalisé. Un jeu pédagogique en ligne suit le parcours d’un copeau de bois, depuis sa mobilisation en forêt jusqu’à sa combustion, et sensibilise le grand public à la valorisation durable du bois en énergie. Un géocatalogue réunit des informations sur les données utilisées par les chercheurs et les acteurs impliqués dans la gestion forestière. Il est accompagné d’un mode d’emploi des données adapté à des problématiques concrètes auxquelles les acteurs sont confrontés.
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- 2022
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30. Near vein metasomatism along propylitic veins in the Baksa Gneiss Complex, Pannonian Basin, Hungary
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Krisztian Fintor, Tivadar M. Tóth, and Félix Schubert
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Baksa Complex, metasomatic zones, epidotization, chloritization, element mobilization, hydrothermal leaching, propylitization ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
In many parts of the metapelitic (gneiss, mica schist) rock section of the Baksa Complex, significant wall-rock alteration is observable along the Ca-Al silicate veins, which show a di → ep ± czo →sp → ab ± kfs → chl → adu → prh → py → cal mineral sequence (FINTOR et al., 2009). These alterations appear as narrow (few cm thick) bleached margins beside thin veins, and broad alteration bands along thick veins where detailed epidotization and chloritization of the adjacent rock are recognizable. Based on petrographic and mineralogical examination of the altered wallrocks, metasomatic zones with characteristic mineral paragenesis can be distinguished: Zone 1 (ab + ttn ± ep), Zone 2 (ep + chl+ ttn + ab ± ser), Zone 3 (chl + ep + ser + rt ± ttn), Zone 4 (ser ± chl). Bulk rock chemical analyses were made from the different metasomatic zones. The results show that fluid circulated in the propylitic veins caused metasomatic alteration of the wall-rock, with transport of considerable amount of Ca2+ toward the adjacent rocks. The hydrothermal leaching almost totally removed the K, Fe, Mg, and Mn ions from the wall rock. The main alteration processes are the epidotization and chloritization of biotite, and albitization of micas (muscovite + biotite) content of metapelites. Based on mobilization of different cations alteration was due to? to a near neutral fl uid (~pH 5–7). The pervasive hydrothermal leaching caused significant secondary porosity (cavities) in the altered domains, which were partially filled by epidote. Fluid inclusions of cavity filling epidote indicate a similar character (Th: 180–360 °C; Salinity: 0.2–1.6 mass% eq. NaCl) to that can be found in Ca-Al silicate veins. The alteration most probably occurred in the 360–480 °C temperature range as products of 'near vein metasomatism' and the altered rock can be related to the propylite metasomatic family.
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- 2010
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31. QUANTIFICATION OF SOIL ORGANIC MATTER DEGRADATION BY ROCK-EVAL PYROLYSIS
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NYILAS, Tünde, TÓTH, Tivadar M., and HETÉNYI, Magdolna
- Published
- 2008
32. Fracture network modelling of a potential high-level nuclear waste repository site
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Tóth, Emese, primary, Hrabovszki, Ervin, additional, Félix, Schubert, additional, and Tivadar, M. Tóth, additional
- Published
- 2022
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33. PSDR4 OUIGEF - Outils innovants pour une gestion concertée des forêts. Innovations Agronomiques 86, 319-329
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Fuhr, M., Becquey, J., Berger, F., Bock, J., Bourhis, F., Dubus, N., Emsellem, K., Monnet, J.-M., Munoz, A., Paccard, P., Peyrache-Gadeau, V., Riond, C., and Tivadar, M.
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- 2022
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34. Statistical characterization of brittle and semi-brittle fault rocks: a clast geometry approach
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Molnár, László, Tóth, Tivadar M., and Schubert, Félix
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- 2014
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35. Determination of geometric parameters of fracture networks using 1D data
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Tóth, Tivadar M.
- Published
- 2010
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36. Integrated petrographic – rock mechanic borecorestudy from the metamorphic basement of thePannonian Basin, Hungary
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Molnár László, Vásárhelyi Balázs, Tóth Tivadar M., and Schubert Félix
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fractured metamorphic reservoir ,rock mechanicalparameters ,fault rocks ,brittle deformation ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
The integrated evaluation of borecores from theMezősas-Furta fractured metamorphic hydrocarbon reservoirsuggests significantly distinct microstructural androck mechanical features within the analysed fault rocksamples. The statistical evaluation of the clast geometriesrevealed the dominantly cataclastic nature of the samples.Damage zone of the fault can be characterised byan extremely brittle nature and low uniaxial compressivestrength, coupled with a predominately coarse fault brecciacomposition. In contrast, the microstructural mannerof the increasing deformation coupled with higher uniaxialcompressive strength, strain-hardening nature andlow brittleness indicate a transitional interval betweenthe weakly fragmented damage zone and strongly grindedfault core. Moreover, these attributes suggest this unit ismechanically the strongest part of the fault zone. Gougerichcataclasites mark the core zone of the fault, with theirwidespread plastic nature and locally pseudo-ductile microstructure.Strain localization tends to be strongly linkedwith the existence of fault gouge ribbons. The fault zonewith ∼15 m total thickness can be defined as a significantmigration pathway inside the fractured crystalline reservoir.Moreover, as a consequence of the distributed natureof the fault core, it may possibly have a key role in compartmentalisationof the local hydraulic system.
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- 2015
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37. Integrated core study of a fractured metamorphic HC-reservoir; Kiskunhalas-NE, Pannonian Basin
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Nagy, Ágnes, Tóth, Tivadar M., Vásárhelyi, Balázs, and Földes, Tamás
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- 2013
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38. Ségrégation environnementale et risques industriels. Les populations à bas revenu de la métropole Aix-Marseille-Provence sont-elles plus exposées aux sites Seveso ?
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Hautdidier, Baptiste, Schaeffer, Yves, Tivadar, M., Environnement, territoires et infrastructures (UR ETBX), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), and Laboratoire des EcoSystèmes et des Sociétés en Montagne (UR LESSEM)
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JEL: Q - Agricultural and Natural Resource Economics • Environmental and Ecological Economics/Q.Q5 - Environmental Economics/Q.Q5.Q53 - Air Pollution • Water Pollution • Noise • Hazardous Waste • Solid Waste • Recycling ,[SHS.STAT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Methods and statistics ,[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography ,[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance - Abstract
International audience; , l’objectif du chapitre est double : (i) comparer deux approches originales pour mesurer ces inégalités environnementales d’exposition aux risques, et (ii) fournir des éléments de réponses – à défaut d’une réponse définitive – à la question posée plus haut pour la métropole d’Aix-Marseille-Provence. La première approche empirique considérée est celle suggérée récemment par Schaeffer et Tivadar (2019). Elle s’inspire de la littérature sur la mesure de la ségrégation socio-spatiale et repose sur le calcul d’un indice de centralisation environnementale. La seconde approche mobilise des outils de la statistique du point, les fonctions empiriques de Ripley (1976). Initialement développées pour l’analyse spatiale en écologie et en épidémiologie, elles n’ont été que marginalement appliquées à l’analyse des inégalités environnementales (Fisher et al. 2006). La section qui suit présente notre cas d’étude, les données disponibles, ainsi que nos questions et approches empiriques.Les troisième et quatrième sections présentent en détail nos méthodes et nos résultats. La dernière section discute les résultats obtenus, avant de conclure.
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- 2021
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39. Refinement of genetic and structural models of the Úrkút manganese ore deposit (W-Hungary, Europe) using statistical evaluation of archive data
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Bíró, Lóránt, Polgári, Márta, Tóth, Tivadar M., and Vigh, Tamás
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- 2012
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40. Fracture network characterization using 1D and 2D data of the Mórágy Granite body, southern Hungary
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Tivadar M. Tóth
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Outcrop ,Geology ,Massif ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Spatial distribution ,01 natural sciences ,Permeability (earth sciences) ,Brittleness ,Shear zone ,Mafic ,Petrology ,Hydraulic jump ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
A disposal system for low- and medium-level nuclear waste in Hungary is being constructed inside the fractured rock body of the Lower Carboniferous Moragy Granite. Previous studies proved that the granitoid massif is rather heterogeneous in terms of lithological composition, brittle structure and hydrodynamic behaviour. A significant part of the body consists of monzogranite, while other portions are more mafic in composition and are monzonites. As a result of at least three significant brittle deformation events, the area is at present crosscut by wide shear zones that separate intensively fractured zones and poorly deformed domains among them. Due to late mineralization processes, some of these fractured zones are totally sealed and cannot conduct fluids, while others are excellent migration pathways. The spatial distribution of these two types nevertheless does not show any systematics. Hydrodynamic behaviour clearly reflects this heterogeneous picture; in some places, hydraulic jumps as great as 25 m at compartment boundaries can be detected. In this study, the fracture network of the Moragy Granite body is evaluated from a geometric aspect using datasets measured at a wide range of scales. 2D digitized images of a hand specimen, one large (20 × 60 m) and 12 smaller subvertical wall rocks (outcrops) and 120 images from tunnel faces representing the ground level of the underground repository site were analysed. Moreover, 1D data from 13 wells that all penetrate the granitoid massif were studied. Based on measured geometric data (spatial position, length, orientation, and aperture) fracture networks are simulated to study connectivity relations and for computing the fractured porosity and permeability at different scales. The results prove the scale-invariant geometry of the fracture system. Geostatistical calculations indicate that measurable fracture geometry parameters behave as regionalized variables and so can be extended spatially. Estimated localities of connected subsystems fit very well with fault zones mapped previously. Moreover, the spatial position of regimes of different hydrodynamic behaviours can be explained by connectivity relations both regionally and within wells.
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- 2018
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41. Evolution of the arc-derived orthogneiss recorded in exotic xenoliths of the Körös Complex (Tisza Megaunit, SE Hungary)
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Tivadar M. Tóth and Félix Schubert
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Arc (geometry) ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geochemistry ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Xenolith ,Eclogite ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Granulite ,01 natural sciences ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Published
- 2018
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42. Hybrid numerical modelling of fluid and heat transport between the overpressured and gravitational flow systems of the Pannonian Basin
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János Szanyi, István Vass, Balázs Kovács, and Tivadar M. Tóth
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Computer simulation ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Geology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,01 natural sciences ,Finite element method ,Basement (geology) ,Heat transfer ,Fluid dynamics ,Fracture (geology) ,Chimney ,Petrology ,Geothermal gradient ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Fractured rock bodies are especially important in Hungary, where numerous hydrocarbon reservoirs and geothermal fields occur in the fractured crystalline basement of the Pannonian Basin. To simulate a 3D fracture network for both near well regions and at reservoir scale, a fractal geometry based DFN (discrete fracture network) modelling system (RepSim) was used. To perform numerical simulation of the geological-hydrogeological problem, in which the hydraulic interaction is investigated between porous and fractured rock bodies, a finite element modelling system called FeFlow was applied. Modelling results suggest that the protruding basement highs govern heat transfer and fluid flow like a “hydro-geothermal chimney” owing to their stratigraphic and structural position as well as favourable hydraulic and thermal conductivities. Thus such fractured basement highs are deemed prospective for further geothermal investigations.
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- 2018
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43. Fluid-inclusion evidence of petroleum migration through a buried metamorphic dome in the Pannonian Basin, Hungary
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Schubert, Felix, Diamond, Larryn W., and Tóth, Tivadar M.
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- 2007
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44. Reconstruction of the paleo-environment and soil evolution of the Csípo˝-halom kurgan, Hungary
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Barczi, Attila, Tóth, Tivadar M., Csanádi, Attila, Sümegi, Pál, and Czinkota, Imre
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- 2006
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45. Integrated evaluation of urban groundwater hydrogeochemistry in context of fractal behaviour of groundwater level fluctuations
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Ildikó Fejes, Tivadar M. Tóth, and Andrea Farsang
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Hydrology ,Hurst exponent ,Rescaled range ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Context (language use) ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Fractal ,Streamflow ,Environmental science ,Groundwater quality ,Groundwater ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology ,Water well - Abstract
The present study was carried out as part of a complex survey of urban groundwater quality and quantity in Szeged, southeast Hungary. The concentrations of 12 inorganic contaminants in 28 shallow groundwater monitoring wells were determined over a 2-year period (2010–2012). The evaluation of concentrations indicates remarkable contamination all over the city. Discriminant analysis (DA) was used to evaluate the spatial changes of groundwater quality. The groundwater levels were measured over a 14-year period (2000–2013). The fractal properties of water level fluctuations time series characterizing the groundwater system and Tisza River were investigated using rescaled range (R/S) analysis. The resulting Hurst exponents clearly showed the persistency and thus long memory effects of both the groundwater and the river flow. Comparison of the results of DA with the results of R/S analysis thus implies that the geological conditions and the changing groundwater quantities are not related to groundwater ...
- Published
- 2017
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46. Effect of nasal airway nonlinearities on oscillometric resistance measurements in infants
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Bence Radics, Zita Gyurkovits, Tivadar M. Tóth, Zoltán Hantos, S Kianoush Bayat, Thibault Coppens, Cyril Page, Nicolas André, Zoltan Gingl, Gergely Makan, Sam Bayat, Loïc Dégrugilliers, University of Szeged [Szeged], Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc [Bruxelles], CHU Amiens-Picardie, Inria Grenoble - Rhône-Alpes, Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique (Inria), Semmelweis University [Budapest], Centre Hospitalier Universitaire [Grenoble] (CHU), Synchrotron Radiation for Biomedicine = Rayonnement SynchroTROn pour la Recherche BiomédicalE (STROBE), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA), and DESSAIVRE, Louise
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,respiratory mechanics ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Respiratory physiology ,Nasal airway ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Oscillometry ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Respiratory system ,upper airway casts ,business.industry ,Airway Resistance ,Respiration ,Infant ,Respiration, Artificial ,[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio] ,030228 respiratory system ,Cardiology ,Linear Models ,business ,forced oscillations - Abstract
International audience; Oscillometric measurements of respiratory system resistance (R-rs) in infants are usually made via the nasal pathways, which not only significantly contribute to overall R-rs but also introduce marked flow (V')-dependent changes. We employed intrabreath oscillometry in casts of the upper airways constructed from head CT images of 46 infants. We examined oscillometric nasal resistance (R-n) in upper airway casts with no respiratory flow (R-0) and the effect of varying V' on R-n by simulating tidal breathing. A characteristic nonlinear relationship was found between R-n and V', exhibiting segmental linearity and a prominent breakpoint (V'(bp)) after log-log transformation. V'(bp) was linearly related to the preceding value of end-expiratory volume acceleration (V `'(eE); on average r(2) = 0.96, P < 0.001). R-n depended on V', and R at end-expiration (R-eE) showed a strong dependence on V `'(eE) in every cast (r(2) = 0.994, P < 001) with considerable interindividual variability. The intercept of the linear regression of R-eE versus V `'(eE) was found to be a close estimate of R-0. These findings were utilized in reanalyzed R-rs data acquired in vivo in a small group of infants (n = 15). Using a graphical method to estimate R-0 from R-eE, we found a relative contribution of V'-dependent nonlinearity to total resistance of up to 33%. In conclusion, we propose a method for correcting the acceleration-dependent nonlinearity error in R-eE. This correction can be adapted to estimate R-0 from a single intrabreath oscillometric measurement, which would reduce the masking effects of the upper airways on the changes in the intrathoracic resistance. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Oscillometric measurements of respiratory system resistance (R-rs) in infants are usually made via the nasal pathways, which not only significantly contribute to overall R-rs but also introduce marked flow acceleration-dependent distortions. Here, we propose a method for correcting flow acceleration-dependent nonlinearity error based on in vitro measurements in 3D-printed upper airway casts of infants as well as in vivo measurements. This correction can be adapted to estimate R-rs from a single intrabreath oscillometric measurement.
- Published
- 2020
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47. Bio-mining of Lanthanides from Red Mud by Green Microalgae
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Marian Rucki, Kateřina Bišová, Tivadar M. Tóth, Vít Náhlík, Milada Vítová, Dana Mezricky, Vojtěch Lanta, Vilém Zachleder, and Mária Čížková
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Lanthanide ,Microbiological Techniques ,red mud ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Chlamydomonas reinhardtii ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Lanthanoid Series Elements ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,lcsh:QD241-441 ,03 medical and health sciences ,recovery ,Nutrient ,Animal science ,Bioreactors ,Dry weight ,Algae ,lcsh:Organic chemistry ,Drug Discovery ,parasitic diseases ,lanthanides ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Soil Microbiology ,030304 developmental biology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Chemistry ,microalgae ,Organic Chemistry ,toxicity ,Desmodesmus ,biology.organism_classification ,Red mud ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Molecular Medicine ,Green algae ,bio-mining - Abstract
Red mud is a by-product of alumina production containing lanthanides. Growth of green microalgae on red mud and the intracellular accumulation of lanthanides was tested. The best growing species was Desmodesmus quadricauda (2.71 cell number doublings/day), which accumulated lanthanides to the highest level (27.3 mg/kg/day), if compared with Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Parachlorella kessleri (2.50, 2.37 cell number doublings and 24.5, 12.5 mg/kg per day, respectively). With increasing concentrations of red mud, the growth rate decreased (2.71, 2.62, 2.43 cell number doublings/day) due to increased shadowing of cells by undissolved red mud particles. The accumulated lanthanide content, however, increased in the most efficient alga Desmodesmus quadricauda within 2 days from zero in red-mud free culture to 12.4, 39.0, 54.5 mg/kg of dry mass at red mud concentrations of 0.03, 0.05 and 0.1%, respectively. Red mud alleviated the metal starvation caused by cultivation in incomplete nutrient medium without added microelements. Moreover, the proportion of lanthanides in algae grown in red mud were about 250, 138, 117% higher than in culture grown in complete nutrient medium at red mud concentrations of 0.03, 0.05, 0.1%. Thus, green algae are prospective vehicles for bio-mining or bio-leaching of lanthanides from red mud.
- Published
- 2019
48. Petrologic comparison of the Gyód and Helesfa serpentinite bodies (Tisia Mega Unit, SW Hungary)
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Tivadar M. Tóth, Balasz Geza Radovics, and Gabor Kovacs
- Subjects
Websterite ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Geochemistry ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Petrology ,Mega ,01 natural sciences ,Geology ,021101 geological & geomatics engineering ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Unit (housing) - Published
- 2016
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49. Lithologically controlled behaviour of the Dorozsma metamorphic hydrocarbon reservoir (Pannonian Basin, SE Hungary)
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Tivadar M. Tóth and Ilona Vargáné Tóth
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Metamorphic rock ,Dolomite ,Geochemistry ,02 engineering and technology ,Massif ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology ,01 natural sciences ,Kyanite ,Petrography ,Fuel Technology ,Basement (geology) ,020401 chemical engineering ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,0204 chemical engineering ,Shear zone ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Gneiss - Abstract
Numerous fractured hydrocarbon reservoirs occur in the metamorphic basement of the Pannonian Basin in Hungary, and among them, the Dorozsma field is one of the most productive. Here 66 boreholes penetrated the metamorphic massif, making detailed petrographic and microstructural evaluation possible. Well-log data (gamma-ray, density, neutron porosity and compressional slowness) are available for each well, which can be used to extend the petrographic information spatially. The data suggest three basic rock types in the study area, which align along a consequent rock column. In the deepest structural positions, amphibolite is typical, while the top of the basement is dominated by kyanite gneiss. Thermobarometric calculation results prove that the gneiss-rich realm was metamorphosed at a significantly higher temperature than the lowermost amphibolite, suggesting a post-metamorphic structural contact between them. The contact zone, observed in numerous boreholes, contains intensively deformed dolomite marble of a few tens of metres in thickness. The peak metamorphic temperature of this rock type is much lower than those typically seen in the two neighbouring blocks. Localising the position of the dolomite marble horizon in each well was accomplished using petrographic and well-log information, and through this investigation, a flat, low-angle shear zone became visible, cut by a set of younger normal faults. Hydrocarbon production data clearly shows that the best, most productive intervals in each well are strongly correlated to the shear zone between the gneiss- and amphibolite-dominated realms, namely the sheared dolomite marble zone.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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50. Archaeometrical results related to Neolithic amphibolite stone implements from Northeast Hungary
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Zsolt Kasztovszky, Erika Kereskényi, Tivadar M. Tóth, Veronika Szilágyi, Ildikó Harsányi, György Szakmány, and Béla Fehér
- Subjects
Archeology ,Outcrop ,Metamorphic rock ,Geochemistry - Abstract
28 amphibolite Neolithic polished stone implements deriving from different archaeological localities and cultures in Northeast Hungary (Borsod-Abauj-Zemplen County) were archaeometrically analysed by mainly non-destructive methods (MS, EDS/SEM, PGAA). Bulk chemistry of the samples showing subalkali characteristics. The amphibolite polished stone tools were divided into two groups based on their mineral components and metamorphic evolution. A single Ca-amphibole approach was used to calculate peak P-T conditions to determine a thermobarometric model for the amphibolite implements. Data of the studied samples were compared to those of the nearest amphibolite outcrops in Gemericum, Veporicum, Tatricum and Zemplinikum (Slovakia). The Variscan P-T loop covered the thermobarometric data of the analysed stone implements and the amphibolite outcrops. The source areas are assumed to be these fields and/or the crossing riverbeds flowing through them to Borsod-Abauj-Zemplen County, the archaeological collecting territory of the amphibolite stone axes.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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