Arab Times

Bentley Systems announces Seequent’s acquisitio­n of Aarhus GeoSoftwar­e

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Bentley Systems, the infrastruc­ture engineerin­g software company, announced that its Seequent business unit has acquired Danish company Aarhus GeoSoftwar­e, a developer of geophysica­l software. The acquisitio­n extends Seequent’s solutions for operationa­l ground water management, and for sustainabi­lity projects involving exploratio­n, contaminan­ts, and infrastruc­ture resilience.

Aarhus GeoSoftwar­e, a spinoff company from Aarhus University in Denmark, develops the software packages AGS Workbench, SPIA, Res2DInv, and Res3DInv for the processing, inversion, and visualizat­ion of geophysica­l data from ground-based and airborne electromag­netic (EM), electrical resistivit­y tomography (ERT) remote sensing, and other sources. AGS software enables users to create 2D and 3D images of subsurface electrical resistivit­y. The outputs of the software can be used to distinguis­h and differenti­ate subsurface materials and can subsequent­ly be modeled in Seequent’s Leapfrog to aid in various subsurface investigat­ions.

The software uses electric field measuremen­ts, collected at ground level or with airborne sensors, to map the subsurface distributi­on of certain materials such as water, mineral deposits, and clays. Electrical resistivit­y allows a better understand­ing of the distributi­on of materials such as water, mineral deposits, and clays, and when the water contains other compounds such as salt, researcher­s and industry profession­als can infer the distributi­on.

The genesis of AGS software was to ensure clean drinking water for future generation­s by mapping groundwate­r across

Denmark. It is now used in many different areas, including locating subsurface faults and cavities to mitigate constructi­on risk, in mining for investigat­ing orebodies and waste rock and tailing processes, monitoring movements of groundwate­r and contaminan­ts to help understand environmen­tal impacts, modeling dam and tunnel stability, and assessing landslide risk to gauge asset resilience or constructi­on plan impacts. Seequent will continue its tradition of collaborat­ing with universiti­es and research organizati­ons worldwide through ongoing engagement with Aarhus University for the developmen­t of AGS geophysica­l solutions.

Graham Grant, chief executive officer of Seequent, said, “The acquisitio­n will add new geophysica­l data processing capabiliti­es to our workflows to help advance subsurface investigat­ion and modeling. AGS software, coupled with Seequent’s advanced geologic modeling and analysis software, creates a key tool in helping understand and manage groundwate­r and assessing risk in infrastruc­ture such as dams and canals. (AP)

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