Seogi Kang

and 2 more

Motivated by the availability of 20,000 line-km of airborne electromagnetic (AEM) data covering the Central Valley of California, we developed a workflow that uses resistivity profiles from electromagnetic (EM) data to assess the suitability of areas for groundwater recharge. We defined a suitable area as one where “fastpaths” of coarse-grained material could efficiently move water from the ground surface to the water table. We defined recharge metrics and generated the corresponding maps by integrating resistivity profiles from AEM data, sediment type (from driller’s logs), water level measurements, and water quality measurements. The workflow is publicly available through a web-based application, fastpath (https://fastpath.stanford.edu). We produced maps displaying recharge metrics on a 400 m x 400 m grid covering the Central Valley, with 80% of the cells sufficiently close to an AEM resistivity profile (within ~ 3 km) to be assessed for recharge. Various decisions are made in the workflow that result in a range of values for determined metrics at any given location. The maps summarizing all metrics show that between 19% (2,000,000 acres) and 56% (7,000,000 acres) of the total area in the valley is land suitable for recharge. The landcover with the largest total area of land classified as suitable is cultivated crops. We estimated the total space available for recharge water to be ~170 km3 which is two orders of magnitude greater than an estimate of the total volume of water likely to be available for recharge.

SEOGI KANG

and 4 more

Airborne electromagnetic (AEM) data can be inverted to recover models of the electrical resistivity of the subsurface; these, in turn, can be transformed to obtain models of sediment type. AEM data were acquired in Butte and Glenn Counties, California, U.S.A. to improve the understanding of the aquifer system. Around 800 line-kilometers of high-quality data were acquired, imaging to a depth of ~300 m. We developed a workflow designed to obtain, from the AEM data, information about the large-scale structure and heterogeneity of the aquifer system to better understand the vertical connectivity. Using six different forms of inversion and posterior sampling of the recovered resistivity models, we produced 6006 resistivity models. These models were transformed to models of sediment type and estimates of percentage of sand/gravel. Exploring the model space, containing the resistivity models and the derived models, allowed us to delineate the large-scale structure of the aquifer system in a way that captures and communicates the uncertainty in the identified sediment type. The uncertainty increased, as expected, with depth, but also served to indicate, as areas of high uncertainty in sediment type, the location of both large-scale and small-scale interfaces between sediment type. A plan view map of the integrated percentage of sand/gravel, when compared to existing hydrographs, revealed the extent of lateral changes in vertical connectivity within the aquifer system throughout the study area.

Seogi Kang

and 2 more