Geophysical Investigation of Vadose Zone Conductivity Anomalies at a Hydrocarbon Contaminated Site: Implications for the Assessment of Intrinsic Bioremediation

Electromagnetic (EM-31), dc resistivity, and ground penetrating radar (GPR) methods were used to investigate part of a former refinery site in Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA. The study area is underlain by about 9–12m of heterogeneous glacial drift deposits overlying a sandy outwash unit. Three large above ground storage tanks (ASTs) formerly occupied the study area and were removed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) in 1997. EM-31 surveys revealed eight remnants of buried pipe ranging from 20m to more than 100m in length. Emanating from some of these abandoned pipe segments are extensive near surface conductivity anomalies, with values ranging from 16mS∕m to greater than 100mS∕m vs. background values of less than 15mS∕m. GPR and dipole-dipole resistivity surveys performed along selected profiles with anomalous conductive zones revealed a channel form within the shallow subsurface. Shallow hand augured soil borings into these conductive zones encountered hydrocarbons perched on thin clay lenses...

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