Negative correlation between porosity and hydraulic conductivity in sand-and-gravel aquifers at Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA

Although it may be intuitive to think of the hydraulic conductivity K of unconsolidated, coarse-grained sediments as increasing monotonically with increasing porosity phi, studies have documented a negative correlation between these two parameters under certain grain-size distributions and packing a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) 2006, Vol.316 (10), p.43-52
1. Verfasser: Morin, R.H
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although it may be intuitive to think of the hydraulic conductivity K of unconsolidated, coarse-grained sediments as increasing monotonically with increasing porosity phi, studies have documented a negative correlation between these two parameters under certain grain-size distributions and packing arrangements. This is confirmed at two sites on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA, where groundwater investigations were conducted in sand-and-gravel aquifers specifically to examine the interdependency of several aquifer properties using measurements from four geophysical well logs. Along with K and phi, the electrical resistivity R0 and the natural gamma activity gamma of saturated deposits were determined as functions of depth. Qualitative examination of results from the first site implies a negative correlation between K and phi that is substantiated by a rigorous multivariate analysis of log data collected from the second site. A principal components analysis describes an over-determined system of inversion equations, with approximately 92% of the cumulative proportion of the total variance being accounted for by only three of the four eigenvectors. A subsequent R-mode factor analysis projects directional trends among the four variables (K, phi, R0 and gamma), and a negative correlation between K and phi emerges as the primary result.
ISSN:0022-1694
1879-2707