Hydrogeological Investigation of a Goaf and Subsidence Area Based on a Ground-to-Air Transient Electromagnetic Sounding Method
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Ground-to-Air Transient Electromagnetic Detection Principle
2.1. Instruments and Equipment
2.2. Detection Principle
- Data preprocessing: including data interception, evaluation, and superposition; noise treatment and baseline correction; and time domain signal data pumping.
- Obtaining the ground electrical parameters: based on the obtained comprehensive superposition signal, convert it into a time-varying apparent resistivity curve.
- Apparent resistivity-depth imaging involves filtering the apparent resistivity curve, suppressing interference, and applying other processing techniques to obtain reliable apparent resistivity-depth data. By analyzing the relative changes in electrical properties within the measurement area based on known logging and seismic data, a preliminary understanding of the geological structure of the section is achieved, resulting in the generation of resistivity-depth profiles and slice maps.
2.3. Calculation Principles
3. Overview of the Study Area and Detection Results
3.1. Overview of the Study Area
3.1.1. Geological Conditions of the Study Area
3.1.2. Hydrogeological Conditions of the Study Area
3.1.3. Survey Overview of the Study Area
3.2. Working Methods and Parameters
3.2.1. Testing Task
3.2.2. Operating Parameters
3.2.3. Engineering Layout
3.3. Interpretation of Typical Profiles of Detection Achievements
- (1)
- The Analysis of Profile Results for Test Line 1
- (2)
- The Analysis of Profile Results for Test Line 5
- (3)
- The Analysis of Profile Results for Test Line 6
- (4)
- The Analysis of Profile Results for Test Line 10
- (5)
- The Analysis of Profile Results for Test Line 12
3.4. Result Analysis
3.5. Detection Result Verification
4. Advantages of the Ground-to-Air Transient Electromagnetic Method
5. Conclusions
- Through comparative analysis, the subsidence area, as a whole, exhibits a characteristic low resistance, with resistivity ranging between 5 and 15 Ω·m. The resistivity of the roadway displays significant variations, presenting a beaded resistivity anomaly. The water-filled roadway demonstrates a beaded low-resistivity anomaly, while the non-water-filled roadway exhibits a beaded high-resistivity anomaly.
- The subsidence area, measuring approximately 140 × 120 m, is situated between survey line 1 and line 8 in a funnel-shaped manner. Due to the absence of survey line control on the northern side of survey line 1, the subsidence area remains open-ended, necessitating further exploration work.
- The subsidence area is centered approximately −100 m to −60 m from line 3 to line 4 of the survey, with the main point of water permeation located at the bottom of the funnel.
- The roadway in the middle section of mining area 310 exhibits a low impedance response from line 1 to line 12, which is influenced by subsidence and experiences varying degrees of water infiltration.
- The middle section of 250 has evident low resistance reactions only at lines 5, 9, and 10 of the survey profiles, with partial water filling observed in the roadway. No significant low resistance is detected in other survey line profiles, indicating that most of the roadway in the middle section of 250 and below remains unaffected by collapse and is free from water accumulation.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Groundwater Type | Aquifer Lithology | Abundant in Water | Trait |
---|---|---|---|
Quaternary alluvial sand gravel pore water | Mainly sand, gravel sand, gravel | Strong rich water, the water inflow of a single well is generally 3000~5000 m3/d. | The aquifer is 400–460 m wide and 35 m thick. The maximum water inflow of a single well is 6907.68 m3/d. Strong rich water. The hydrochemical type is heavy carbonate-calcium type. |
Network weathering crevice water | Crystalline limestone, crystalline dolomite, dolomitic crystalline limestone, granite, skarn, metamorphic sandstone | Weak rich water, single well water inflow is generally 30~300 m3/d | The thickness of the aquifer is 37.05–73.74 m and the water output from a single hole is 17.19–65.23 m3/d, with weak water richness. The hydrochemical types are bicabonate-calcium and sodium. |
Solution fissure water resembling a carbonate dike | Crystalline limestone, crystalline dolomite, dolomitic crystalline limestone, granite, skarn, metamorphic sandstone | The upper part is moderately rich in water, and the water inflow of a single well is generally 800~1500 m3/d. The lower part is weak and rich in water, and the water inflow of a single well is generally 10~300 m3/d | The rich water above 190 m elevation is medium, and the rich water at a deep depth is weak. The hydrochemical types are bicabonate-calcium and sodium. |
Fractured water in non-carbonate dike structures | Granite, skarn, metamorphic sandstone | Weak rich water, single well water inflow 10~100 m3/d | The thickness of the aquifer is 42.98–70.10 m and the water output from a single hole is 7.09–42.16 m3/d, with weak water richness. The hydrochemical type is heavy carbonate—calcium—sodium type. |
Falling body cracking crack water | Dolomitic crystalline limestone | It has strong water richness and water permeability | The thickness of the aquifer is 42.98–70.10 m and the water output from a single hole is 7.09–42.16 m3/d, with weak water richness. The hydrochemical type is heavy carbonate—calcium—sodium type. |
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Feng, Q.; Li, C.; Hao, S.; Li, D.; Liu, T.; Sun, Z.; Zhou, L. Hydrogeological Investigation of a Goaf and Subsidence Area Based on a Ground-to-Air Transient Electromagnetic Sounding Method. Water 2024, 16, 1067. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16071067
Feng Q, Li C, Hao S, Li D, Liu T, Sun Z, Zhou L. Hydrogeological Investigation of a Goaf and Subsidence Area Based on a Ground-to-Air Transient Electromagnetic Sounding Method. Water. 2024; 16(7):1067. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16071067
Chicago/Turabian StyleFeng, Qicai, Chang Li, Shuren Hao, Dongsheng Li, Tao Liu, Zhonglin Sun, and Ling Zhou. 2024. "Hydrogeological Investigation of a Goaf and Subsidence Area Based on a Ground-to-Air Transient Electromagnetic Sounding Method" Water 16, no. 7: 1067. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16071067
APA StyleFeng, Q., Li, C., Hao, S., Li, D., Liu, T., Sun, Z., & Zhou, L. (2024). Hydrogeological Investigation of a Goaf and Subsidence Area Based on a Ground-to-Air Transient Electromagnetic Sounding Method. Water, 16(7), 1067. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16071067