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ARTICLES:
Borehole-to-surface
electrical resistivity monitoring of a salt water injection
experiment
By D. Bevc and H. F. Morrison
A field experiment was
conducted at the University of California Richmond Field Station
to demonstrate the sensitivity of borehole-to-surface resisitivity
measurements in groundwater investigations. A quantity of
salt water was injected into a fresh water aquifer while the
resistivity was monitored using a multichannel borehole-to-surface
system. Two experiments were conducted using pole-pole and
pole-dipole receiver electrode arrays. The data from the pole-pole
experiment were superimposed to simulate a dipole-pole array
and the data from the pole-dipole array were superimposed
to simulate a dipole-dipole array. This superposition of the
data was done to enhance the anomaly and facilitate interpretation.
A numerical modeling study
was performed in conjunction with the field experiment in
order to interprete the results. A three-dimensional modeling
program was used to simulate the geological setting of the
experiment and the salt water injection. This modeling revealed
that an asymmetric displacement of the salt water slug results
in asymmetric current channeling which is observable as a
25 to 40 percent difference between preinjection and postinjection
borehole-to-surface resisitivity.
In addition to demonstrating
the sensitivity of subsurface arrays, this experiment demonstrated
that the measurement of bulk resistivity can identify a groundwater
flow pattern not detected by hydrological measurements.
Geophysics, Vol. 56, no.
6 (June 1991); P. 769-777
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