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Wiley InterScience

Ground Water Monitoring & Remediation

Ground Water Monitoring & Remediation

Volume 26 Issue 2, Pages 62 - 69

Published Online: 18 May 2006

Journal compilation © 2009 National Ground Water Association



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Subsurface Imaging of an Abandoned Solid Waste Landfill Site in Norman, Oklahoma
Joseph T. Zume 1 , Aondover Tarhule 2 , Scott Christenson 3
Copyright 2006 The Author(s) Journal compilation

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionStudy areaData collection and processingResults and discussionReferences

Leachate plume emanating from an old unlined municipal landfill site near the city of Norman, Oklahoma, is discharging into the underlying alluvial aquifer. Subsurface imaging techniques, electrical resistivity tomography and electrical conductivity (EC) logging, were used on the site to detect and map the position of the leachate plume. Anomalous EC zones, delineated with the two methods, correlated with the occurrence of the plume detected by water chemistry analyses from multilevel monitoring wells. Specific conductance, a potential indicator of leachate contamination, ranged from 1861 to 7710 μS/cm in contaminated zones and from 465 to 2180 μS/cm in uncontaminated ground water. Results are in agreement with those from earlier studies that the leachate plume emerges from the landfill along preferential pathways. Additionally, there are indications that the leading edge of the plume has migrated, at least, 200 m away from the landfill in the direction of ground water flow.


Received: 02 March 2006; Accepted: 10 May 2006;
DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1745-6592.2006.00066.x About DOI

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