Abstract

Abstract The impact of sewage irrigation and groundwater contamination were investigated near Roorkee in north India using the Direct Current Resistivity (DCR) method and the Radiomagnetotelluric (RMT) method. Intensive field measurements were carried out in the vicinity of a waste disposal site, which was extensively irrigated with sewage water. For comparison a profile was investigated on a reference site, where no contamination was expected. In addition to conventional 1D and 2D inversion, the measured data sets were interpreted using a 2D joint inversion algorithm. The inversion results from the data obtained from the sewage irrigated site indicate a decrease of resistivity up to 75% in comparison with the reference site. The depth range from 5 to 15 m is identified as a shallow unconfined aquifer and the decreased resistivities are ascribed as the influence of contamination. Furthermore, a systematic increase in the resistivities of the shallow unconfined aquifer is detected as we move away from the waste disposal site. The advantages of both, the DCR and RMT methods, are quantitatively integrated by the 2D joint inversion of both data sets and lead to a joint model, which explains both data sets.

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