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Published online 25 February 2008
Published in Vadose Zone J 7:184-193 (2008)
DOI: 10.2136/vzj2006.0160
© 2008 Soil Science Society of America
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SPECIAL SECTION: GROUND PENETRATING RADAR IN HYDROGEOPHYSICS

Measuring Water Content Heterogeneity Using Multifold GPR with Reflection Tomography

John H. Bradford*

Center for Geophysical Investigation of the Shallow Subsurface, Boise State Univ., 1910 University Dr., Boise, ID 83725. Presented at the 75th International meeting of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists, 2004, Houston, TX
* Corresponding author (johnb{at}cgiss.boisestate.edu).

Received 1 November 2006.

Continuous multioffset acquisition of ground penetrating radar (GPR) data provides the capability to measure the lateral and vertical distribution of soil moisture. Multioffset data enable measurement of radar velocity, which in turn allows the estimation of soil moisture through an appropriate petrophysical relationship. Although rarely used in GPR investigations, reflection tomography coupled with prestack depth migration has the ability to measure lateral velocity variations with much greater resolution and accuracy than conventional methods of velocity analysis. I used reflection tomography in the post-migration domain to estimate radar velocity and the Topp equation to estimate subsurface moisture distribution in two and three dimensions. At a contaminated site near a former refinery I identified a near-vertical boundary separating coarse-grained sands and gravels from a unit containing a high fraction of silts and clays. At a chlorinated solvent waste site, I found significant heterogeneity in the moisture content distribution despite apparent homogeneity indicated by direct push methods.

Abbreviations: CMP, common midpoint • CPT, cone penetrometer • EM, electromagnetic • GPR, ground penetrating radar • LNAPL, light nonaqueous-phase liquid • NMO, normal moveout • PSDM, prestack depth migration • RMO, residual moveout




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S. Lambot, A. Binley, E. Slob, and S. Hubbard
Ground Penetrating Radar in Hydrogeophysics
Vadose Zone J., February 25, 2008; 7(1): 137 - 139.
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