Open Access
Ground penetrating radar and direct current resistivity evaluation of the desiccation test cap, Savannah River Site
Author(s) -
D.E. Wyatt,
R.J. Cumbest
Publication year - 1996
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/468519
Subject(s) - ground penetrating radar , geology , electrical resistivity tomography , groundwater , desiccation , coring , aeolian processes , infiltration (hvac) , geotechnical engineering , environmental science , soil science , hydrology (agriculture) , electrical resistivity and conductivity , geomorphology , radar , drilling , engineering , meteorology , mechanical engineering , telecommunications , botany , physics , electrical engineering , biology
The Savannah River Site (SRS) has a variety of waste units that may be temporarily or permanently stabilized by closure using an impermeable cover to prevent groundwater infiltration. The placement of an engineered kaolin clay layer over a waste unit is an accepted and economical technique for providing an impermeable cover but the long term stability and integrity of the clay in non-arid conditions is unknown. A simulated kaolin cap has been constructed at the SRA adjacent to the Burial Ground Complex. The cap is designed to evaluate the effects of desiccation on clay integrity, therefore half of the cap is covered with native soil to prevent drying, while the remainder of the cap is exposed. Measurements of the continuing impermeability of a clay cap are difficult because intrusive techniques may locally compromise the structure. Point measurements made to evaluate clay integrity, such as those from grid sampling or coring and made through a soil cover, may miss cracks, joints or fissures, and may not allow for mapping of the lateral extent of elongate features. Because of these problems, a non-invasive technique is needed to map clay integrity, below a soil or vegetation cover, which is capable of moderate to rapid investigation speeds. Two non-intrusive geophysical techniques, direct current resistivity and ground penetrating radar (GPR), have been successful at the SRS in geologically mapping shallow subsurface clay layers. The applicability of each technique in detecting the clay layer in the desiccation test cap and associated anomalies was investigated