Survey Design

BACKGROUND

Unlike the gravity and magnetic surveys we have already conducted, this will be your first experience with a controlled source experiment. Until now, you have been mapping anomalous variations in the earth's natural fields. For this survey, you will create the electrical field (control the source). This approach has both advantages (better control over signal and noise) and disadvantages (including cost and complexity).

Resistivity also differs from gravity and magnetics surveys in that the phenomenon being measured (resistivity) is primarily controlled by the water content rather than by the characteristics of the rock itself. This makes it difficult to design surveys for areas where you have no prior information about ground water conditions. This survey is a good illustration of that problem. You already have some understanding of the subsurface geology based on both the geologic setting relative to the Front Range and on your previous surveys, but you have no way of knowing, however, whether ground water even exists at the site, much less any evidence for the depth to or gradient of the water table. For that reason, ground water projects often start with reconnaissance surveys to provide enough information to determine whether more expensive, detailed surveys are warranted and to design those surveys more intelligently. This exercise represents one such reconnaissance survey, and it will be followed with a request to design another survey if the results of this are favorable.

OBJECTIVES

There are five learning objectives for this project:

PROCEDURE

You are to submit a bid for a reconnaissance resistivity survey to determine whether the igneous dike described by previous surveys might be interrupting groundwater flow and creating a subsurface pool of water on the up-gradient side as described in the Request for Bid. You will follow much the same procedure that you used in designing the gravity and magnetic surveys (estimate amplitude and frequency of signal and noise, design a survey to enhance the signal and minimize the noise at the lowest overall cost, and estimate the cost of the survey). The steps to be followed should include the following:

OUTCOMES

The final report should be in the form of a bid. The heading can be in standard memo format. The bid must include survey design parameters, a summary of the decision-making process that led to that design (including an estimate of the likelihood that the survey will work), a brief discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of a controlled source experiment, and a firm statement of total cost. The report must be no longer than two pages, but details (flow-chart of the survey design process, tabulation of survey design parameters, breakdown of costs, etc.) can be included as appendices. Be sure to look at the Request for Bid to ensure that you have included in your bid everything that the client has requested. Remember that the bid is a sales document; it should communicate quickly and effectively and should focus on those issues that will be of most interest to the client.