Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (Aug 2014)

Geophysical methods to support correct water sampling locations for salt dilution gauging

  • C. Comina,
  • M. Lasagna,
  • D. A. De Luca,
  • L. Sambuelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-18-3195-2014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 8
pp. 3195 – 3203

Abstract

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To improve water management design, particularly in irrigation areas, it is important to evaluate the baseline state of the water resources, including canal discharge. Salt dilution gauging is a traditional and well-documented technique in this respect. The complete mixing of salt used for dilution gauging is required; this condition is difficult to test or verify and, if not fulfilled, is the largest source of uncertainty in the discharge calculation. In this paper, a geophysical technique (FERT, fast electrical resistivity tomography) is proposed for imaging the distribution of the salt plume used for dilution gauging at every point along a sampling cross section. With this imaging, complete mixing can be verified. If the mixing is not complete, the image created by FERT can also provide a possible guidance for selecting water-sampling locations in the sampling cross section. A water multi-sampling system prototype aimed to potentially take into account concentration variability is also proposed and tested. The results reported in the paper show that FERT provides a three-dimensional image of the dissolved salt plume and that this can potentially help in the selection of water sampling points.