Title: Basic Geologic and Hydrogeologic Investigations
1Basic Geologic and Hydrogeologic Investigations
- 7.1 Key drilling and Push technologies
- 7.2 Piezometers and water-table observations
wells - 7.3 Installing piezometers and water-table wells
- 7.4 Making water-level measurements
- 7.5 Geophysics applied to site investigations
- 7.6 Groundwater investigations
2KEY DRILLING AND PUSH TECHNOLOGIESdownload
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3Piezometers and Water-Table Observation Wells
- PIEZOMETER
- A borehole or standpipe installed to some depth
below the water table
piezometer
Water-table observation well
4Piezometers and Water-Table Observation Wells
- PIEZOMETER
- A borehole or standpipe installed to some depth
below the water table
piezometer
Water-table observation well
5Basic design for piezometers and water-table
observation wells
- Screen for water to enter the standpipe
- Sand pack around the screen to increase the
effective size of the screen and support material
placed above - Seal above the screen to prevent water from
leaking along the casing - Screen and casing materials that do not react
with groundwater or contaminants - Casing protector to finish the top of piezometer
and prevent unauthorized access
6Piezometers and Water-Table Observation Wells
- PIEZOMETER
- A borehole or standpipe installed to some depth
below the water table
piezometer
Water-table observation well
7- Caving Materials with Seal
- Hollow-stem auger used to drill the hole to
required depth - Center rod is removed to provide access to
formation - Auger itself holds the hole open like a temporary
casing - Now, we are ready to emplace the piezometer
8Making water level measurements
- Electric tape
- Measures depth of water level from fixed point at
top of well (usually top of casing) - When the electrode hits water, electric circuit
is completed and light goes on. - Actual elevation of water elevation of fixed
point measurement on tape - Pressure transducer (logger)
- Continuous measurement
- Data is collected in digital format
- Measurement taken at intervals of few seconds
9Making water level measurements
- Electric tape
- Measures depth of water level from fixed point at
top of well (usually top of casing) - When the electrode hits water, electric circuit
is completed and light goes on. - Actual elevation of water elevation of fixed
point measurement on tape - Pressure transducer (logger)
- Continuous measurement
- Data is collected in digital format
- Measurement taken at intervals of few seconds
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11Making water level measurements
- Electric tape
- Measures depth of water level from fixed point at
top of well (usually top of casing) - When the electrode hits water, electric circuit
is completed and light goes on. - Actual elevation of water elevation of fixed
point measurement on tape - Pressure transducer (logger)
- Continuous measurement
- Data is collected in digital format
- Measurement taken at intervals of few seconds
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14Making water level measurements
- Electric tape
- Measures depth of water level from fixed point at
top of well (usually top of casing) - When the electrode hits water, electric circuit
is completed and light goes on. - Actual elevation of water elevation of fixed
point measurement on tape - Pressure transducer (logger)
- Continuous measurement
- Data is collected in digital format
- Measurement taken at intervals of few seconds
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17In-Situ Minitroll
18Making water level measurements
- Electric tape
- Measures depth of water level from fixed point at
top of well (usually top of casing) - When the electrode hits water, electric circuit
is completed and light goes on. - Actual elevation of water elevation of fixed
point measurement on tape - Pressure transducer (logger)
- Continuous measurement
- Data is collected in digital format
- Measurement taken at intervals of few seconds
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21In-Situ Minitroll
22Geophysics applied to site investigation
- Surface geophysical techniques
- Used to map features of geological setting and
location of abandoned hazardous waste disposal
sites - Electrical resistivity
- Electromagnetic methods
- Ground penetrating radar (GPR)
- Seismic reflection
- Seismic refraction
- Magnetic
- Borehole Geophysics
- Provides stratigraphic and hydrogeologic
information
23Making water level measurements
- Electric tape
- Measures depth of water level from fixed point at
top of well (usually top of casing) - When the electrode hits water, electric circuit
is completed and light goes on. - Actual elevation of water elevation of fixed
point measurement on tape - Pressure transducer (logger)
- Continuous measurement
- Data is collected in digital format
- Measurement taken at intervals of few seconds
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26In-Situ Minitroll
27Geophysics applied to site investigation
- Surface geophysical techniques
- Used to map features of geological setting and
location of abandoned hazardous waste disposal
sites - Electrical resistivity
- Electromagnetic methods
- Ground penetrating radar (GPR)
- Seismic reflection
- Seismic refraction
- Magnetic
- Borehole Geophysics
- Provides stratigraphic and hydrogeologic
information
28Electric Resistivity method
- A measure of Electrical conductivity (or
resistivity) - Conductance is controlled by
- content of dissolved mass (TDS)
- relative abundance of clay minerals
29Making water level measurements
- Electric tape
- Measures depth of water level from fixed point at
top of well (usually top of casing) - When the electrode hits water, electric circuit
is completed and light goes on. - Actual elevation of water elevation of fixed
point measurement on tape - Pressure transducer (logger)
- Continuous measurement
- Data is collected in digital format
- Measurement taken at intervals of few seconds
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32In-Situ Minitroll
33Geophysics applied to site investigation
- Surface geophysical techniques
- Used to map features of geological setting and
location of abandoned hazardous waste disposal
sites - Electrical resistivity
- Electromagnetic methods
- Ground penetrating radar (GPR)
- Seismic reflection
- Seismic refraction
- Magnetic
- Borehole Geophysics
- Provides stratigraphic and hydrogeologic
information
34Electric Resistivity method
- A measure of Electrical conductivity (or
resistivity) - Conductance is controlled by
- content of dissolved mass (TDS)
- relative abundance of clay minerals
35Electric Resistivity method
- Measuring electric potential difference between
two electrodes in an electrical field as induced
by two current electrodes. - Apparent resistivity
- Two modes
- 1. profiling method (electrode spacing constant)
- 2. sounding method ( increasing electrode
spacing)
36Schlumberger Array
37Electromagnetic Methods
- a current is induced in the ground with an
alternating current transmitting coil - Magnetic field around coil induces electric field
- depth of electric field controlled by
- Background properties of medium
- Moisture content
- Relative difference in conducting properties of
medium and target - Most important application
- Detect buried objects, waste disposal sites
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39Ground Penetrating RadarGPR
- Method used to
- delineate features of the geologic setting
- Map distribution of buried objects
- Define configuration of water table and
stratigraphic boundaries - Establish the distribution of liquids
- GPR is well suited for surveying abandoned waste
disposal sites
40GPR Principle
- Reflection of Radio waves from subsurface
discontinuities - A transmitting antenna at surface radiates short
pulses of radio waves into the ground. - An antenna that is moved along the surface
recovers the reflected energy from subsurface - Radar energy is reflected due to changes in
dielectric constants and electrical conductivity
(reflecting variation in properties, degree of
saturation, material density) - GPR works like reflection seismic method
(electromagnetic reflections instead of acoustic
energy)
41- Investigative depth of method is determined by
electrical conductivity of earth material - ? electric cond. in mS/m
- Depth range few m to 100 m (lt 30 m in most
cases)
42GPR
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44GPR
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46Reflection Seismic Method
- Reflected
- Refracted
- Reflection seismic is most useful in
environmental applications - Useful in
- Determining top of bedrock surface
- Structural features
- Pattern of stratigraphic layering
47Seismic Methods
- Method is based on measuring velocity and paths
of seismic waves in subsurface - Energy to produce seismic waves
- Explosion
- Vibroseis
- Rifle bullet
- Weight drop (Hammer)
-
48Seismic waves
- Surface waves
- Waves transmitted from source to receiver along
ground surface - Refraction wave
- Wave moving along the boundary before being
reflected - Reflection Wave
- Wave reaching lower boundary and reflected back
to ground surface
49Seismic waves
Surface wave
reflected wave
refracted wave
50Reflection from multiple layers
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52Procedures of seismic survey
- Data acquisition
- Processing
- Interpretation
- Seismograph
- records and enhances sound waves to detect
geologic features - Geophones
- receivers for detecting reflected acoustic
signals
53Common Depth Point (CDP)
54Example VSP 1441 shotpoints, 24-fold CDP, 3
lines
55Borehole Geophysics Methods
- Not all techniques are utilized in groundwater
industry because of economics - Caliper logs
- Resistivity log
- spontaneous potential (SP) log
- Natural gamma log
56Caliper logs
- Record variation of borehole diameter with depth
- Used to
- Interpret other logging methods affected by hole
size - Provide info on fracture distribution and
lithologies - Estimate quantities of cement or gravel to
complete a water well
57Resistivity logs
- Measures change in resistance between a lead
electrode in borehole and a fixed electrode at
surface. - Log provides info on resistivity (ohms) changes
vs depth - Useful in distinguishing different types of
lithologies (sand vs clay or shale) - Sand high resistivity (log reflection to the
right) - Clay less resistivity (log reflection to the
left)
58Spontaneous potential (Sp)
- Measures natural electrical potentials (voltages)
that develop at contact between clay beds and
sands (as a result of differences in lithology
and in chemistry between drilling water and
formation water) - Sand less potential (left on the log)
- Used in water quality investigations
59Gamma log
- Measures total intensity of natural gamma
radiation - Radionuclides K-40, thorium, Uranium
- Run in cased wells
- Higher count rate in finer-grained units
- Useful for determining clay content of units,
boundaries between units, regional correlation
between boreholes
60Groundwater investigations
- Regional investigation
- Large area, overall evaluation of groundwater
conditions - Local investigations
- More detailed study of an area geology,
hydrogeology, water quality - Site investigations
- Specific site e.g., well field, leaking
refinery, abandoned industrial site. Done with
other investigations as risk assessment,
air-quality monitoringetc
61Steps of Groundwater investigations
- Objectives
- Workplan
- Collecting data
- Interpreting data
- Developing conclusions
- Presenting results
62Sources of information
- Topo maps
- Soil maps
- Geol maps
- Aerial photos
- Sat. images
- Quality data
- Climate data
- Previous reports
- Government reports
- Personal interviews
- outcrop mapping
- Borehole logging
- Core samples
- Geop. Logs
- Textural analyses
- -------
- Hydraulic head
- Hydraulic conductivity
- Pumping tests
- Tracer tests
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64Chapter Highlights
- A variety of different drilling methods can be
used to sample the subsurface and to provide
boreholes for the installation of wells or
piezometers. Hollow-stem and solid-stem augers
are well suited for drilling in unlithified
sediments. - Push technologies involve pushing or hammering a
casing string into the ground, carrying sensors,
sampling tools, or permanent monitoring devices. - A piezometer is a standpipe that is installed to
some depth below the water table. Water entering
the piezometer rises up the casing and reaches a
stable elevation, which is a measure of the
hydraulic head at the open part of the casing at
the bottom. A water-table observation well is a
standpipe with a large screened section spanning
the water table. The water-level elevation
provides the elevation of the water table at that
location.
65- In practice, piezometers are designed to have a
screen, attached to the bottom of the casing, a
sand-pack to support the screen, and a seal to
prevent leakage of water down the borehole. The
seal is usually constructed with granular
bentonite, a low-permeability material that
expands when it becomes wet. - Water-level elevations in wells or piezometers
are determined using an electric tape or a
transducer system that provides a continuous
measurement of pressure with time. An electric
tape is a tape measure that buzzes when the
electrode on the end touches the water surface. - A variety of geophysical techniques are used in
hydrogeological investigations. Most useful
surface surveying methods include electrical
resistivity, electromagnetics, ground penetrating
radar, and seismic. - Geophysical logs are also run in boreholes. Key
logs used in ground-water applications include
single-point resistance, spontaneous potential
(SP), and gamma. - Ground-water investigations are carried out at
regional, local, and site scales. The type of
investigative approach changes as a function of
scales.