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  1. newcastlehelix.com › stories › harnessing-the-heatNewcastle Helix

    16 de mar. de 2023 · Professor David Manning, Newcastle University, who is leading the consortium explains: “From the existing borehole we know that the temperature of the rock at 1600m beneath the city of Newcastle is approximately 70°C and this has the potential to be used as a source of heat for our homes, businesses and industry.

  2. 1 de mar. de 2007 · 1 School of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK (e-mail: david.manning@ncl.ac.uk) 2 Search for other works by this author on:

  3. 7 de jul. de 2022 · Newcastle University - Prof. David Manning - Professor of soil science - Geothermal potential of NE and experiences of drilling geothermal boreholes

    • 26 min
    • 59
    • Weardale Lithium
  4. Steering Committee Member School of Civil Engineering and Geosciences. Email: david.manning@ncl.ac.uk. Telephone: +44 (0) 191 222 6610. Professor David Manning is interested in how soils and plants interact in response to climate change, and how we can exploit soil processes to minimise the effects of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions.

  5. David Manning is a geologist by training, now Professor of Soil Science at Newcastle University. He holds an Honorary Chair in the School of Geosciences at Edinburgh University. His research focuses on carbon capture in natural and artificial soils (carbonation and biochar), and on both shallow and deep geothermal energy.

  6. 11 de dez. de 2018 · David Manning, professor of soil science at Newcastle University, said: “In this country we’ve been mining for over 2,000 years, even before the Romans in Cornwall we were trading tin to the Phoenicians. We need to take all that knowledge from oil and gas and take it across to geothermal so that we can run with that given it’s carbon free.

  7. David Manning1 1 School of Civil Engineering & Geosciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK david.manning@ncl.ac.uk Abstract Potash, conventionally sourced from evaporite deposits, is the product of a well-established industry that has matured since the Second World War. Global production is about 39 million