Monitoring engineered remediation with borehole radar
January 1, 2007
The success of engineered remediation is predicated on correct emplacement of either amendments (e.g., vegetable-oil emulsion, lactate, molasses, etc.) or permeable reactive barriers (e.g., vegetable oil, zero-valent iron, etc.) to enhance microbial or geochemical breakdown of contaminants and treat contaminants. Currently, site managers have limited tools to provide information about the distribution of injected materials; the existence of gaps or holes in barriers; and breakdown or transformation of injected materials over time.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2007 |
|---|---|
| Title | Monitoring engineered remediation with borehole radar |
| DOI | 10.1190/1.2769561 |
| Authors | John Lane, Frederick Day-Lewis, Peter Joesten |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | The Leading Edge |
| Index ID | 70030984 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Office of Ground Water; Toxic Substances Hydrology Program |
Related
John W Lane, Jr., Ph.D.
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Email
Phone
Frederick D. Day-Lewis (Former Employee)
Research Hydrologist, Hydrogeophysics Branch
Research Hydrologist, Hydrogeophysics Branch
Related
John W Lane, Jr., Ph.D.
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Senior Advisor for Water/International
Email
Phone
Frederick D. Day-Lewis (Former Employee)
Research Hydrologist, Hydrogeophysics Branch
Research Hydrologist, Hydrogeophysics Branch