A TECHNIQUE FOR MODELING GEOPHYSICAL LOGS AND ITS APPLICATION TO THE COASTAL PLAIN OF SOUTH CAROLINA
This approach to modeling geophysical logs at any location within a study area was applied to the gamma-ray and long-normal resistivity logs in the Upper Cretaceous Series of the Coastal Plain in South Carolina. Logs were modeled at closely spaced intervals (<3 miles), and these logs were used to construct a series of strike- and dip-oriented cross sections. Additionally, one strike-oriented cross section and one dip-oriented cross section were constructed at an interval of approximately one mile between predicted well logs. All cross sections reveal that both hydrostratigraphic and lithostratigraphic units change in a nonlinear manner between existing well locations. The nonlinear changes illustrated by these cross sections suggest: 1) the presence of a subtle subsurface dip reversal in the coastal region of South Carolina; 2) the possibility of faulting in the Florence and Sumter Counties; and 3) the thickness and continuity (and quality?) of both aquifers and confining units is highly variable throughout the Coastal Plain.