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Spatial monitoring of groundwater drawdown and rebound associated with quarry dewatering using automated time-lapse electrical resistivity tomography and distribution guided clustering

Chambers, Jon E.; Meldrum, Philip I.; Wilkinson, Paul B.; Ward, Wil O.C.; Jackson, Christopher R.; Matthew, B.; Joel, P.; Kuras, Oliver; Bai, Li; Uhlemann, Sebastian; Gunn, David

Spatial monitoring of groundwater drawdown and rebound associated with quarry dewatering using automated time-lapse electrical resistivity tomography and distribution guided clustering Thumbnail


Authors

Jon E. Chambers

Philip I. Meldrum

Paul B. Wilkinson

Wil O.C. Ward

Christopher R. Jackson

B. Matthew

P. Joel

Oliver Kuras

Li Bai

Sebastian Uhlemann

David Gunn



Abstract

Dewatering systems used for mining and quarrying operations often result in highly artificial and complex groundwater conditions, which can be difficult to characterise and monitor using borehole point sampling approaches. Here automated time-lapse electrical resistivity tomography (ALERT) is considered as a means of monitoring subsurface groundwater dynamics associated with changes in the dewatering regime in an operational sand and gravel quarry. We considered two scenarios: the first was unplanned interruption to dewatering due to a pump failure for a period of several days, which involved comparing ALERT monitoring results before and after groundwater rebound; the second involved a planned interruption to pumping over a period of 6 h, for which near-continuous ALERT monitoring of groundwater rebound and drawdown was undertaken. The results of the second test were analysed using distribution guided clustering (DGC) to provide a more quantitative and objective assessment of changes in the subsurface over time.

ALERT successfully identified groundwater level changes during both monitoring scenarios. It provided a more useful indication of the rate of water level rise and maximum water levels than piezometer monitoring results. This was due to the piezometers rapidly responding to pressure changes at depth, whilst ALERT/DGC provided information of slower changes associated with the storage and delayed drainage of water within the sediment. By applying DGC we were able to automatically and quantitatively define changes in the resistivity sections, which correlated well with the direct observations of groundwater at site. For ERT monitoring applications that generate numerous time series, the use of DGC could significantly enhance the efficiency of data interpretation, and provide a means of automating groundwater monitoring through assigning alarm thresholds associated with rapid changes in groundwater conditions.

Citation

Chambers, J. E., Meldrum, P. I., Wilkinson, P. B., Ward, W. O., Jackson, C. R., Matthew, B., …Gunn, D. (2015). Spatial monitoring of groundwater drawdown and rebound associated with quarry dewatering using automated time-lapse electrical resistivity tomography and distribution guided clustering. Engineering Geology, 193, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enggeo.2015.05.015

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 12, 2015
Online Publication Date May 16, 2015
Publication Date Jul 2, 2015
Deposit Date Oct 20, 2016
Publicly Available Date Oct 20, 2016
Journal Engineering Geology
Print ISSN 0013-7952
Electronic ISSN 1872-6917
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 193
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enggeo.2015.05.015
Keywords Electrical resistivity tomography (ERT); Mining; Dewatering; Groundwater monitoring; Clustering; Image analysis
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/757704
Publisher URL http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013795215001696

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