Abstract

The accurate location of gas upwelling flows is still an open problem for non-invasive imaging techniques in populated areas. Gas blowouts of deep origin may represent a serious threat to human health in urban areas and should be correctly imaged with high-resolution for assessing the related hazards. In this work, we propose an integration of active (electrical resistivity tomography and high-resolution sub-bottom profiling complemented with the multibeam bathymetry) and passive (self-potential and ambient noise recordings) geophysical methods to image gas upwelling flows in the coastal area of Fiumicino (Central Italy), where the gas presence is well-documented by previous works. We demonstrate that merging seismic sub-bottom profiling and electrical resistivity tomography has enormous diagnostic potential for gas detection, since they combine the high resolution needed to correctly image the subsurface and the interfaces between different media with the high diagnostic capability of electrical methods to detect anomalies associated with the gas emissions. Passive seismic methods complement the analysis enabling an estimation of the shear-wave velocity through array measurements. Finally, the reconstruction of the natural electrical sources, inferred from the inversion of self-potential data, confirms the location of the near-surface gas upwelling flows assessed through the resistivity model. This work demonstrates that the integration of high-resolution active and passive seismic and electrical methods can be an effective choice for the accurate location of risk-prone areas by imaging the near surface gas pathways where borehole drilling is strongly limited if not forbidden.

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