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Airborne electromagnetics (EM) as a three-dimensional aquifer-mapping tool

January 1, 2000

The San Pedro River in southeastern Arizona hosts a major migratory bird flyway, and was declared a Riparian Conservation Area by Congress in 1988. Recharge of the adjacent Upper San Pedro Valley aquifer was thought to come primarily from the Huachuca Mountains, but the U. S. Army Garrison of Fort Huachuca and neighboring city of Sierra Vista have been tapping this aquifer for many decades, giving rise to claims that they jointly threatened the integrity of the Riparian Conservation Area. For this reason, the U. S. Army funded two airborne geophysical surveys over the Upper San Pedro Valley (see figure 1), and these have provided us valuable information on the aquifer and the complex basement structure underlying the modern San Pedro Valley. Euler deconvolution performed on the airborne magnetic data has provided a depth-to-basement map that is substantially more complex than a map obtained earlier from gravity data, as would be expected from the higher-resolution magnetic data. However, we found the output of the Euler deconvolution to have "geologic noise" in certain areas, interpreted to be post-Basin-and-Range Tertiary volcanic flows in the sedimentary column above the basement but below the ground surface.

Publication Year 2000
Title Airborne electromagnetics (EM) as a three-dimensional aquifer-mapping tool
Authors Jeff Wynn, Don Pool, Mark Bultman, Mark E. Gettings, Jean Lemieux
Publication Type Book
Publication Subtype Conference publication
Index ID 70111411
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Eastern Mineral Resources Science Center