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Evaluation of Lake Sediment Thickness from Water-Borne Electrical Resistivity Tomography Data

Authors :
Johannes Hoppenbrock
Matthias Bücker
Jakob Gallistl
Adrián Flores Orozco
Carlos Pita de la Paz
César Emilio García García
José Alberto Razo Pérez
Johannes Buckel
Liseth Pérez
Source :
Sensors, Vol 21, Iss 23, p 8053 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Lakes are integrators of past climate and ecological change. This information is stored in the sediment record at the lake bottom, and to make it available for paleoclimate research, potential target sites with undisturbed and continuous sediment sequences need to be identified. Different geophysical methods are suitable to identify, explore, and characterize sediment layers prior to sediment core recovery. Due to the high resolution, reflection seismic methods have become standard for this purpose. However, seismic measurements cannot always provide a comprehensive image of lake-bottom sediments, e.g., due to lacking seismic contrasts between geological units or high attenuation of seismic waves. Here, we developed and tested a complementary method based on water-borne electrical-resistivity tomography (ERT) measurements. Our setup consisted of 13 floating electrodes (at 5 m spacing) used to collect ERT data with a dipole–dipole configuration. We used a 1D inversion to adjust a layered-earth model, which facilitates the implementation of constraints on water depth, water resistivity, and sediment resistivity as a priori information. The first two parameters were readily obtained from the echo-sounder and conductivity-probe measurements. The resistivity of sediment samples can also be determined in the laboratory. We applied this approach to process ERT data collected on a lake in southern Mexico. The direct comparison of ERT data with reflection seismic data collected with a sub-bottom profiler (SBP) showed that we can significantly improve the sediment-thickness estimates compared to unconstrained 2D inversions. Down to water depths of 20 m, our sediment thickness estimates were close to the sediment thickness derived from collocated SBP seismograms. Our approach represents an implementation of ERT measurements on lakes and complements the standard lake-bottom exploration by reflection seismic methods.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14248220
Volume :
21
Issue :
23
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Sensors
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6ab844714ea147249a181b12ff6c8fd9
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/s21238053