Using airborne EM and borehole NMR data to map the transmissivity of a shallow semi-confined aquifer, western NSW.
Kok Piang Tan, Ross S. Brodie, Larysa Halas and Ken Lawrie
ASEG Extended Abstracts
2015(1) 1 - 4
Published: 2015
Abstract
The Broken Hill Managed Aquifer Recharge (BHMAR) project aimed to define key groundwater resources and aquifer storage options in the lower Darling River floodplain of western NSW. The project was multi-disciplinary and utilised airborne electromagnetics (AEM), borehole nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and LiDAR DEM data and lithological, hydrostratigraphic and hydrochemical information to develop a suite of hydrogeological and groundwater property maps and products. This abstract discusses the methods and results of estimating the transmissivity of the semi-confined target aquifer. Hydrostratigraphy and hydraulic texture classes were mapped by interpreting the AEM data in conjunction with borehole geophysics and lithological information. Aquifer transmissivity was statistically derived by combining borehole NMR hydraulic conductivity estimates with the mapped 3D distribution of texture classes and hydrostratigraphic units. Using a statistical and GIS approach, the derived aquifer thicknesses in the key areas ranged from 20 - 40 m and the lower and upper transmissivity bounds ranged from 1 to 10 m2/d, and 10 m2/d to 1000 m2/d, respectively.https://doi.org/10.1071/ASEG2015ab173
© ASEG 2015