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Floating Electromagnetic Surveys from the Lower Delaware River Basin

Electromagnetic (EM) geophysical methods provide information about the bulk electrical conductivity of the subsurface. EM data has been widely used to investigate aquifers and geologic structures. In the following study, the United States Geological Survey conducted a boat-towed, waterborne transient electromagnetic (FloaTEM) survey to examine conductivity within the subsurface of the main Delaware River channel and the Leipsic River. The Leipsic River flows through an estuary into the Delaware Bay. Subsurface conductive zones, when viewed in the context of the regional conceptual model and other data, can help determine the likely groundwater location of the freshwater/saltwater interface within the Delaware River, as well as key hydrogeological layers such as the Lower Potomac-Raritan-Magothy Aquifer within the Northern Atlantic Coastal Plain Aquifer System, and their connectivity with the riverbed. Permeable aquifers could provide a hydraulic connection between surface water and inland groundwater. Therefore, changes to river water salinity could have an accelerated impact on water pumped from wells inland that are connected via these permeable aquifers. The FloaTEM system transmits a primary electrical current through a transmitter loop (Tx) wire. This creates a static primary magnetic field. Then, the current in the TX loop is subsequently turned off, resulting in secondary electrical currents being induced in the earth. These induced electrical currents decay with time, and this rate of decay in the secondary electrical field is a function of the bulk conductivity of the subsurface material. As the secondary electrical field decays, a secondary magnetic field is induced and measured at a receiver (Rx) loop towed behind the Tx loop. The Rx loop measures the decay of the secondary magnetic field as a function of time (dB/dt). Measured dB/dt decay curves can be inverted to recover the depth-dependent resistivity structure of the earth. FloaTEM surveys were conducted downstream from Wilmington, DE on 8/26/2020 and 8/27/2020. Data from 8/26/2020 were collected around the Augustine Wildlife Area boat ramp, and data on 8/27/2020 were collected near the Collins Landing boat ramp. FloaTEM surveys were again conducted downstream from Wilmington, DE on 8/25/2021 and 8/26/2021. Data from 8/25/2021 were collected upstream of the 2020 surveys around the Pennsville public boat ramp, while data on 8/26/2021 were collected near the Collins Landing boat ramp and covered a similar area as the 2020 data. Data collected in 2021 also included a section of the Delaware River further upstream near Philadelphia PA, collected on 8/24/2021 and made use of the Fort Mifflin boat ramp. A final back and forth profile in the Leipsic River within the Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge (estuary) was gathered on 8/27/21, and used the Port Mahon Boat Launch as the starting/ending point. Surface water specific conductance data were also collected during portions of the surveys.

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Author(s) David M Rey orcid, Martin Briggs orcid, Neil C Terry orcid, Eric A White orcid, Brett R Trottier orcid
Publication Date 2022-12-01
Beginning Date of Data 2020-08-26
Ending Date of Data 2021-08-27
Data Contact
DOI https://doi.org/10.5066/P9X8RUBW
Citation Rey, D.M., Briggs, M., Terry, N.C., White, E.A., and Trottier, B.R., 2022, Floating Electromagnetic Surveys from the Lower Delaware River Basin: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9X8RUBW.
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Metadata Date 2022-12-19
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Citations of these data No citations of these data are known at this time.
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License http://www.usa.gov/publicdomain/label/1.0/
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Harvest Source: ScienceBase
Harvest Date: 2022-12-20T04:42:10.538Z