• Seismic waves help scientists 'see' chem

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Mon Jul 27 21:30:32 2020
    Seismic waves help scientists 'see' chemical changes beneath a watershed


    Date:
    July 27, 2020
    Source:
    Penn State
    Summary:
    Chemical reactions deep below ground affect water quality,
    but methods for 'seeing' them are time-consuming, expensive and
    limited in scope. A research team found that seismic waves can
    help to identify these reactions under an entire watershed and
    protect groundwater resources.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Chemical reactions deep below ground affect water quality, but methods for "seeing" them are time-consuming, expensive and limited in scope. A Penn
    State- led research team found that seismic waves can help to identify
    these reactions under an entire watershed and protect groundwater
    resources.


    ========================================================================== "About one third of the U.S. population gets their drinking water from groundwater, so we need to protect this valuable resource," said Susan Brantley, distinguished professor of geosciences and director of the
    Earth and Environmental Systems Institute (EESI) at Penn State. "At this
    point, however, we don't know where the water is or how it moves in the subsurface because we don't know what is down there. In this study we used human-generated seismic waves -- similar to the waves from earthquakes
    -- to look under the surface." Traditional geochemical tests involve
    drilling a borehole 3 to 4 inches in diameter deep into the ground,
    collecting the soil and rock samples, and grinding and analyzing the
    chemical makeup of the samples in a laboratory.

    The process is expensive and laborious, and it only reveals the
    geochemical information for that specific point in a watershed rather
    than the entire watershed, said Xin Gu, a postdoctoral scholar in EESI.

    "In this study, we had the advantage of having previously drilled
    boreholes, so we knew at which depths geochemical changes happen,"
    Gu said. "We also had the materials from the boreholes, so we knew the
    mineral abundance and element composition. Here we tried to expand our knowledge by doing geophysics, which is relatively more efficient."
    The researchers logged -- lowered instruments that can send and receive signals, or even take high-resolution images, down a borehole -- a
    115-foot deep borehole drilled into the valley floor at the NSF-funded Susquehanna Shale Hills Critical Zone Observatory, a forested research
    site in Penn State's Stone Valley Forest that sits atop the Rose Hill
    shale formation.



    ========================================================================== Using a seismic logging tool, the researchers mapped the subsurface. The logging tool sends out a seismic wave and records the wave's velocity,
    or how quickly it moves, as it travels away from the tool, explained
    Gu. The researchers lowered the logging tool into the borehole and took measurements as it rose back to the surface. Faster velocities indicated
    that the waves traveled through solid bedrock or where pores in weathered
    rock are filled with water. Slower velocities indicated the waves traveled through weathered rock with air-filled pores, or soil near the surface.

    The research team assimilated the information into a rock physics model
    that determined the composition change, porosity change and saturation
    change of the rock to explain the measured velocities.

    They discovered that simple chemical reactions between water and clay
    caused small changes that the seismic waves could "see," according to
    Brantley. The changes helped the researchers understand where water opens
    up pores in the subsurface. They report their findings today (July 27)
    in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    The researchers also found tiny gas bubbles in the groundwater that
    they speculate is deep carbon dioxide produced by microbial respiration
    and mineral reactions in the subsurface. Soil microbes produce carbon
    dioxide as a byproduct of respiration, much like humans do when they
    exhale. When water passes through the soil on its way to the water table,
    it can carry this carbon dioxide with it, Gu said.

    There are two very reactive minerals commonly found in shale -- pyrite
    and carbonate minerals, he added. When pyrite interacts with water,
    it oxidizes and generates sulfuric acid. The acid can interact with
    carbonate, a base that neutralizes the acid but generates carbon dioxide
    in the process. This carbon dioxide can occupy pore space at certain
    depths, even under the water table, explained Gu.



    ==========================================================================
    The researchers corroborated their results with data taken from valley and ridge boreholes drilled and logged in 2006 and 2013, respectively. They
    also compared it to two-dimensional models showing how velocities
    change in the subsurface. The 2D models were created using seismic waves generated by striking an aluminum plate with a sledgehammer and recording
    the waves at many locations along the surface.

    "Geophysical imaging is a quite powerful tool," said Gu. "From the
    boreholes, we know how velocity changes with depth, from the lab
    measurements on the core materials we know what the mineralogy and the geochemistry changes are with depth, and by combining that knowledge with
    the 2D seismic models, we can infer how the mineralogy and geochemistry
    changes spatially across the watershed." The carbon dioxide in the water
    does not pose a health risk, said Brantley, adding that it is exciting the researchers could "see" it with seismic waves without having previously
    known it was down there.

    "These measurements and our ability to combine geochemical and geophysical observations will help us understand the landscape sculpted by water in
    the rocks beneath us," she said.

    In addition to Gu and Brantley, the research team includes Andrew Nyblade,
    Lisa Ma, David Oakley and Natalie Accardo, Penn State; Gary Mavko,
    Stanford University; and Bradley Carr, University of Wyoming.

    The U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation funded
    this research.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Penn_State. Note: Content may be
    edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Xin Gu, Gary Mavko, Lisa Ma, David Oakley, Natalie Accardo,
    Bradley J.

    Carr, Andrew A. Nyblade, and Susan L. Brantley. Seismic refraction
    tracks porosity generation and possible CO2 production at depth
    under a headwater catchment. PNAS, 2020 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2003451117 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200727154214.htm

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