Abstract
Electrical imaging is a 2-dimensional investigation method that can be used to
rapidly determine subsurface conductivity variation. In dryland salinity
studies, electrical imaging is used to define the vertical extent of high
electrical conductivity zones first identified using electromagnetic (EM)
profiling equipment. Field techniques are described using 25 or 50 electrodes,
connected to a resistance meter by a multi-core cable, to obtain images at a
variety of electrode separations. The model of electrical conductivity
variation obtained by an inversion of the field data is shown to agree very
well with the results of detailed field investigations, including data from
soil sampling, 1 : 5 extract analysis, and borehole electrical conductivity
logging.
Results are described from the Liverpool Plains at Yarramanbah Creek and Round
Island, where a thick sequence of smectite clay overlies sands and gravels.
The image clearly identifies zones of high salt content in the clay which have
been sampled and logged using borehole measurements of electrical
conductivity. Results are also described from a dryland salinity area in the
upper part of Dicks Creek catchment on the Southern Tablelands of New South
Wales. These data show the extent of clay overlying bedrock and correlate very
well with the results of 1 : 5 extract analysis from shallow piezometers along
the profile line.
Electrical imaging is an appropriate follow-up method for the investigation of
electrical conductivity anomalies first identified by EM profiling and is
advisable before drilling at a site to optimise the location of piezometers.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
29 articles.
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