CHARACTERIZATION OF FRACTURED BEDROCK USING ELECTROMAGNETOTELLURICS
The remote sensing analysis provides information on the x and y locations of the photolinears as well as the intersections of these features. The traditional geophysical methods, such as very low frequency geophysics, resistivity, and electromagnetics, also provide information on the x and y locations of subsurface anomalies and to a limited extent the depth of the anomaly.
ElectroMagnetoTellurics (EMT) provides information in the z direction. The EMT method is a passive method that measures the electric and magnetic fields generated by naturally occurring telluric currents that flow through the subsurface. The collection and analysis of EMT data over a potential well location provides a view into the subsurface as to the depth and frequency of predominant fracture zones in the underlying fractured bedrock.
The application of EMT to several existing bedrock sites as well as ground water exploration programs for the development of new public water supply wells in crystalline bedrock aquifers will be presented for the Seacoast area of New Hampshire.