1887
Volume 25, Issue 2
  • ISSN: 0812-3985
  • E-ISSN: 1834-7533

Abstract

The removal of native vegetation for the development of land has caused the salinisation of surface soil and water resources in Australia. It is important to determine the existence of potential salinity hazards so that preventative measures may be taken at an early stage. The current hydrogeological conditions and the topography of a given catchment influence the movement of saline groundwater, and it is of particular importance to identify areas of high- and low-recharge to groundwater. On a catchment scale, the delineation of high-recharge areas by drilling can be prohibitively expensive, and more efficient mapping methods are required.

Broadband electromagnetic (EM) sounding methods offer the possibility of obtaining the vertical conductivity distribution in the regolith, to produce three-dimensional maps of the resistivity structure. These maps could be used to interpret the distribution of features related to hydrology, such as recharge and stratification of stored salt in catchments. For salinity-related problems, a regolith depth of about 50 m is relevant. It is therefore necessary to measure the high-frequency content of the EM response to differentiate shallow conductive layers.

For both ground-based and airborne EM methods, the response has been modelled in a frequency range of a few hundred Hz to 50 kHz. Salinity profile types have been identified to characterise different types of recharge. These profile types have been simulated with models consisting of horizontal layers of different resistivity. The theoretical modelling has determined that EM methods can be used to distinguish different types of salinity profiles. These results are supported by inversion of EM data collected in the field in a number of catchments.

The transient electromagnetic (TEM) method is used for ground-based broadband EM measurements, and modelling shows that both the depth and thickness of the salt accumulation can be resolved when its depth is as little as 6 m and its thickness 10 m. Additionally, a relatively resistive basement below the salt accumulation may be distinguished from a conductive one. Since the former case implies the presence of a high-recharge salinity profile and the latter case a low-recharge profile, this method may be used to differentiate the two types of profiles.

Down-hole conductivity logs in catchments near Collie and at East Yornaning, WA, confirm that different salinity profiles can be distinguished with EM methods. At Collie, the TEM method has detected the presence of salt accumulations and has determined the depth of their lower boundary. Inversion of these results shows the presence of a resistive electrical basement below the salt accumulations, and therefore indicates that relatively high recharge conditions are associated with these salinity profiles. Similarly, measurements along traverse lines in the East Yornaning catchment show a correlation between the inversions results and known geological features.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1071/EG994089
1994-06-01
2026-01-14
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

References

  1. Buselli, G. and O’Neill, B., 1977, SIR0TEM: A new portable Instrument for multichannel transient electromagnetic measurements. Bull. Aust. Soc. Explor. Geophys. 8, 82–87.
  2. Buselli, G., Barber, C. and Williamson, D. R., 1986, The mapping of groundwater contamination and salinity by electromagnetic methods. Proceedings of the 1986 National Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium, The Institution of Engineers, Australia, 317–322.
  3. Cook, P. G., Walker, G. R., Buselli, G., Potts, I. and Dodds, A. R., 1992, The application of electromagnetic techniques to groundwater recharge investigations. J. Hydrol. 130, 201–229.
  4. Duncan, A. C., Roberts, G. P., Buselli, G., Pik, J. R, Williamson, D. R., Roocke, P. A., Thorn, R. G. and Anderson., 1992, SALTMAP – Airborne EM for the environment. Explor. Geophys. 23,123–126.
  5. Dyson, P. R., 1983, Dryland salting and groundwater discharge in the Victorian Uplands. Proc. R. Soc. Vict. 95, No. 3, 113–116.
  6. Johnston, C. D., 1983, Estimation of groundwater recharge from the distribution of chloride in deeply weathered profiles from south-west Western Australia. In: Papers of the International Conference on Groundwater and Man. Vol.1: The Investigation and Assessment of Groundwater Resources, AWRC Conference Series No. 8(1), 143–152.
  7. Johnston, C. D., 1987a, Mechanisms of water movement and salt mobilisation in profiles of southwest Western Australia. In: Proc. International Conference on Groundwater Systems under Stress, AWRC Conference Series. 13, 389–398.
  8. Johnston, C. D., 1987b, Distribution of chloride in relation to subsurface hydrology. In: A.J. Peck and D.R. Williamson (Eds.), Hydrology and Salinity in the Collie River Basin, Western Australia, J. Hydrol. 94, 67–88.
  9. Johnston, C. D. and McArthur, W. M., 1981, Sub-surface salinity in relation to weathering depth and landform in the eastern part of the Murray River catchment area, Western Australia. CSIRO Australia, Division of Land Resources Management Technical Paper No. 10, 1–19.
  10. Jolly, I. D., Cook, P. G., Allison, G. B. and Hughes, M. W., 1989, Simultaneous water and solute movement through an unsaturated soil following an increase in recharge. J. Hydrol. 111, 391–396.
  11. Jupp, D. L. B. and Vozoff, K., 1975, Stable iterative methods for geophysical inversion. Geophys. J. R. Astron. Soc. 42, 957–976.
  12. McAllister, K. and Raiche, A. R, 1986, Program Grendl. Manual prepared for AMIRA by the Mathematical Geophysics Group, CSIRO Division of Mineral Physics and Mineralogy.
  13. McNeill, J. D., 1980, Electrical conductivity of soils and rocks. Geonics Limited Technical Note TN-5. 22 pp.
  14. McNeill, J. D., 1986, Geonics EM39 borehole conductivity meter – Theory of operation. Geonics Limited Technical Note TN-20.17 pp.
  15. Peck, A. J., Johnston, C. D. and Williamson, D. R., 1981, Analyses of solute distribution in deeply weathered soils. Agric. Water Manage. 4, 83–102.
  16. Roberts, G. R, Duncan, A. C., Anderson, A. and Roocke, P. A., 1993, SALTMAP – A new airborne electromagnetic system for salinity studies. Proceedings 7th ISCO Conference, Sydney. 745–750.
  17. Salama, R. B., Bartle, G., Farrington, P. and Wilson, V., 1994, Basin geomorphological controls in mechanisms of recharge and discharge and its effect on salt storage and mobilisation – comparative study using geophysical surveys. J. Hydrol. 155,1–26.
  18. Sharma, M. L., Barron, R. J. W. and Williamson, D. R., 1987, Soil water dynamics of lateritic catchments as affected by forest clearing for pasture. J. Hydrol. 94, 29–46.
  19. Street, G. J., 1992, Airborne geophysical surveys – applications in land management. Explor. Geophys. 23, 333–338.
  20. Williams, B. G. and Braunach, M., 1984, The detection of subsurface salinity within the northern slopes region of Victoria, Australia. In: R.H. French (Ed.), Salinity in Watercourses and Reservoirs, Proc. Int. Symp. on State-of-the-Art Control of Salinity, Butterworth Publishers. 515–524.
/content/journals/10.1071/EG994089
Loading

Most Cited This Month Most Cited RSS feed

This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error