Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6407735 | CATENA | 2016 | 16 Pages |
â¢An 1D inversion procedure was proposed by integrating multi-receiver EMI measurements.â¢The EMI inversion was subjected to vertical constraints subjected by CPT.â¢Vertical stratigraphic information from CPT was supplemented with lateral information from the EMI inversion.â¢The depth of the interfaces within a complex sedimentary environment were reconstructed in 3D.
Conventional apparent electrical conductivity (Ïa) inversion approaches are generally oriented towards a smooth soil profile with gradual transitions between large stratigraphic entities. In a sedimentary environment, layered models with abrupt boundaries between the different soil units represent the soil profile accurately. Therefore, a 1D Ïa depth modeling procedure was developed where vertical constraints were subjected by cone penetration testing (CPT). We employed the Ïa measurements of a multi-receiver EMI instrument to map the stratigraphy of a 53Â ha estuarine polder area up to a depth of approximately 6.0 to 6.5Â m. From a limited number of CPT observations, a 4-layered soil stratigraphy was deduced with a variable topsoil containing small-scale features above a layer of either sandy or clayey estuarine deposits, a peat layer of approximately 1Â m thickness and a Quaternary coarse sand substrate. The detailed vertical observations from the CPT logs allowed to estimate the inversion parameters to perform a step-wise 1D inversion of the EMI Ïa data, as to direct the inversion towards a realistic outcome. The depth of the interfaces between either the estuarine sediments and the peat layer and between the peat and the sand were estimated with an average error of approximately 0.5Â m, hereby assuming that the thickness each layer is at least 1Â m. Moreover, the variable conductivity of the top 2.0Â m revealed a wide range of small and/or subtle features. To conclude, integrating the laterally dense Ïa measurements with a limited amount of detailed vertical observations from CPT logs allowed for a pseudo 3D representation of the soil stratigraphy within a complex sedimentary environment. This information could serve as a proxy for a range of applications which necessitate detailed information about the subsoil.