Hydro-gravimetry in West-Africa: First results from the Djougou (Benin) superconducting gravimeter
•We investigate gravity corrections for hydrological studies in West-Africa (Benin).•Topography, shelter, data processing and atmospheric effects need to be assessed.•Shelter size and atmospheric effects avoid precise retrieval of evapotranspiration.•Differences between soil moisture and gravity cha...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of geodynamics 2014-10, Vol.80, p.34-49 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •We investigate gravity corrections for hydrological studies in West-Africa (Benin).•Topography, shelter, data processing and atmospheric effects need to be assessed.•Shelter size and atmospheric effects avoid precise retrieval of evapotranspiration.•Differences between soil moisture and gravity changes call for physically based modeling.•Short time and seasonal gravity changes of hydrological origin are investigated.
The increasing number of hydro-gravimetry studies proves the rising interest of the hydrology community toward this monitoring method. The accuracy of superconducting gravimeters (SG) potentially allows the retrieval of small water storage changes (WSC) down to a few millimeters of equivalent water thickness. However, the importance of corrections applied to SG data to achieve such a precision in gravity residuals should be recalled. The Djougou permanent gravity station presented in this paper and located in northern Benin, West-Africa, provides a good opportunity to review these considerations. This station is equipped since July 2010 with the superconducting gravimeter SG-060 aimed at deriving WSC at different time-scales, daily to inter-annual. In this area, WSC are (1) part of the control system for evapotranspiration (ET) process, a key variable of the West-African monsoon cycle and (2) the state variable for resource management, a critical issue in storage-poor hard rock basement contexts such as in northern Benin. The potential for deriving WSC from time-lapse gravity data partly depends on environmental features such as topography and the instrument shelter. Therefore, this issue is addressed first, with the background idea that such sensitivity analysis should be undertaken before setting up any new instrument. In Djougou, local topography is quite flat leading to a theoretical straightforward relationship between gravity changes and WSC, close to the standard Bouguer value. However, the shelter plays a significant masking role, which is the principal limitation to the retrieval of fast hydrological processes such as ET following a rain event. Several issues concerning classical gravity corrections are also addressed in the paper. These include gap-filling procedures during rain-events and drift estimates for short time series. Special attention is provided to atmospheric corrections, and different approaches are tested: a simple scalar admittance, a filtered scalar admittance, a frequency-dependent admittance and direct atmospheric |
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ISSN: | 0264-3707 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jog.2014.04.003 |