کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4729151 | 1640241 | 2011 | 9 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Two geophysical techniques were integrated to map the groundwater aquifers on complex geological settings, in the crystalline basement terrain in northeast Nuba Mountains. The water flow is structurally controlled by the northwest–southeast extensional faults as one of several in-situ deformational patterns that are attributed to the collision of the Pan-African oceanic assemblage of the Nubian shield against the pre-Pan African continental crust to the west. The structural lineaments and drainage systems have been enhanced by the remote sensing technique. The geophysical techniques used are: vertical electrical soundings (VES) and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT), in addition to hydraulic conductivity measurements. These measurements were designed to overlap in order to improve the producibility of the geophysical data and to provide a better interpretation of the hydrogeological setting of the aquifer complex structure. Smooth and Block inversion schemes were attempted for the observed ERT data to study their reliability in mapping the different geometries in the complex subsurface. The VES data was conducted where ERT survey was not accessible, and inverted smoothly and merged with the ERT in the 3D resistivity grid. The hydraulic conductivity was measured for 42 water samples collected from the distributed dug wells in the study area; where extremely high saline zones were recorded and have been compared to the resistivity values in the 3D model.
► Integrated VES/ERT data succeed to map the fractured zones and the GW flow.
► Potential aquifers of 80–120 ohm m are mapped at about 33 m depth.
► Combined EC/resistivity buildup data provided new aquifer locations and types.
► Estimated formation factor from 7 to18 in both the northern and southern parts.
► NE Altrtr and south Abugebiha are considered new aquifer targets.
Journal: Journal of African Earth Sciences - Volume 60, Issue 5, July 2011, Pages 337–345