Abstract

SUMMARY Boat-towed radio-magnetotelluric (RMT) measurements using signals between 14 and 250 kHz have attracted increasing attention in the near-surface applications for shallow water and archipelago areas. A few large-scale underground infrastructure projects, such as the Stockholm bypass in Sweden, are planned to pass underneath such water zones. However, in cases with high water salinity, RMT signals have a penetration depth of a few metres and do not reach the geological structures of interest in the underlying sediments and bedrock. To overcome this problem, controlled source signals at lower frequencies of 1.25 to 12.5 kHz can be utilized to improve the penetration depth and to enhance the resolution for modelling deeper underwater structures. Joint utilization of boat-towed RMT and controlled source audio-magnetotellurics (CSAMT) was tested for the first time at the Äspö Hard Rock Laboratory (HRL) site in south-eastern Sweden to demonstrate acquisition efficiency and improved resolution to model fracture zones along a 600-m long profile. Pronounced galvanic distortion effects observed in 1-D inversion models of the CSAMT data as well as the predominantly 2-D geological structures at this site motivated usage of 2-D inversion. Two standard academic inversion codes, EMILIA and MARE2DEM, were used to invert the RMT and CSAMT data. EMILIA, an object-oriented Gauss–Newton inversion code with modules for 2-D finite difference and 1-D semi-analytical solutions, was used to invert the RMT and CSAMT data separately and jointly under the plane-wave approximation for 2-D models. MARE2DEM, a Gauss–Newton inversion code for controlled source electromagnetic 2.5-D finite element solution, was modified to allow for inversions of RMT and CSAMT data accounting for source effects. Results of EMILIA and MARE2DEM reveal the previously known fracture zones in the models. The 2-D joint inversions of RMT and CSAMT data carried out with EMILIA and MARE2DEM show clear improvement compared with 2-D single inversions, especially in imaging uncertain fracture zones analysed in a previous study. Our results show that boat-towed RMT and CSAMT data acquisition systems can be utilized for detailed 2-D or 3-D surveys to characterize near-surface structures underneath shallow water areas. Potential future applications may include geo-engineering, geohazard investigations and mineral exploration.

Highlights

  • The magnetotelluric (MT) method was first introduced to the geophysical community by Tikhonov (1950) and Cagniard (1953)

  • For the controlled source audio-magnetotelluric (CSAMT) data, both distortion and source effects should be investigated before we invert the data using a routine 2-D inversion

  • We used the CSAMT and RMT 1-D modules of EMILIA that account for distortion and layer parameters and search for the simplest model

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Summary

Introduction

The magnetotelluric (MT) method was first introduced to the geophysical community by Tikhonov (1950) and Cagniard (1953). The MT method utilizes measurements of two horizontal components of electrical fields and three components of magnetic fields generated by natural sources, such as magnetospheric and ionospheric currents and thunderstorms. Disadvantages, such as low signal strength in the ‘dead’ bands (around 1 and 1 kHz) and low signal-to-noise (S/N) ratios in areas subject to cultural noises. In order to overcome these problems, Goldstein & Strangway (1975) proposed use of the controlled source audio-magnetotelluric (CSAMT) method. Near-field effects often arise due to the limited distance between the transmitter and the receiver sites employed for a high S/N ratio preventing the use of a plane-wave approximation (Wannamaker 1997a,b; Routh & Oldenburg 1999; Kalscheuer et al 2015)

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