Borehole and Surface Geophysical Monitoring, and Simple Modelling of Groundwater Polluted by Waste Leachates
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 353 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
Detailed monitoring of point sources of groundwater pollution is  expensive due to the high cost of drilling monitoring boreholes.  Whether groundwater pollution is due to mining, industrial or  domestic waste disposal, a universal difficulty when monitoring  groundwater contamination is the placement of boreholes to  adequately define the extent of the pollution plume. This paper reports groundwater 'resistivity variations determined  from transient electromagnetic soundings at a domestic waste  disposal site north of Perth in Western Australia. Together with  available hydrogeological and water quality data, the geophysics  provides a broad "plume scale" picture of groundwater contamination.  A simple three dimensional model of plume development, which takes  account of the dimensions of the wastes, has also been developed and  shows good agreement with the spread of contamination indicated by  the geophysics for relatively small values of the dispersivities.  Better estimates of these parameters are still required. The work indicates that a combination of geophysics and modelling  with ground-truth data from groundwater quality monitoring of  boreholes is required to avoid difficulties in interpretation of  data and to better define the extent and migration of pollution in  Groundwater.
Citation
APA: (1988) Borehole and Surface Geophysical Monitoring, and Simple Modelling of Groundwater Polluted by Waste Leachates
MLA: Borehole and Surface Geophysical Monitoring, and Simple Modelling of Groundwater Polluted by Waste Leachates. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1988.
