A Joint TEM-HLEM Geophysical Approach to Borehole Siting in Deeply Weathered Granitic Terrains

The accurate location of aquiferous fracture zones in granite beneath a > 50 m thick weathered mantle in semi‐arid regions is a major hydrogeological problem. It is expected that the zone of intensive fracturing will be more susceptible to weathering and thus be characterized by the thickest deve...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ground water 2001-07, Vol.39 (4), p.554-567
Hauptverfasser: Meju, M.A., Fontes, S. L., Ulugergerli, E.U., La Terra, E.F., Germano, C.R., Carvalho, R.M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The accurate location of aquiferous fracture zones in granite beneath a > 50 m thick weathered mantle in semi‐arid regions is a major hydrogeological problem. It is expected that the zone of intensive fracturing will be more susceptible to weathering and thus be characterized by the thickest development of saprolite, a good electrically conductive target for deep‐probing electromagnetic systems. The single‐loop transient electromagnetic (TEM) technique is well known to have the capability for detecting concealed steep mineralized targets in mining environments and can be adapted to this hydrogeological problem. We propose that combining the conventional frequency‐domain horizontal‐loop electromagnetic (HLEM) and single‐loop TEM is an effective practical approach to locating concealed aquiferous fracture zones. In the supporting case studies presented here, we deployed multifre‐quency HLEM profiling (with 50 m transmitter‐receiver separation) and TEM soundings with contiguous 10 or 20 m sided loops along the survey lines in a granitic terrain affected by deep (> 50 m) weathering in northeast Brazil. A somewhat layered structure consisting of resistive hardpan/leached zone, conductive saprolite, and resistive basement is identifiable in the typical TEM depth sounding data. We obtained coincident HLEM and TEM anomalies at all the sites, enabling a relatively straightforward selection of potential drilling positions. Simple resistivity‐depth transformation of the TEM data was done for each site, yielding an approximate section from which drilling depths were estimated. All of the boreholes located were successful. Although our results appear to indicate that the single‐loop TEM method could be used independently for borehole siting in deeply weathered granitic terrains and that the weathering profile over granite can be mapped using TEM depth soundings of appropriate observational bandwidth, we recommend a joint electromagnetic approach for optimal well siting.
ISSN:0017-467X
1745-6584
DOI:10.1111/j.1745-6584.2001.tb02344.x