Artigo Revisado por pares

Integrated geoelectrical and structural studies for groundwater investigation in parts of Abuja, North Central Nigeria

2013; Wiley; Volume: 12; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.3997/1873-0604.2014007

ISSN

1873-0604

Autores

Maxwell Omeje, H. Wagiran, Noorddin Ibrahim, Oha Ifeanyi Andrew, Onwuka Solomon, Soheil Sabri,

Tópico(s)

Groundwater and Watershed Analysis

Resumo

ABSTRACT Abuja, the capital city of Nigeria, West Africa, is underlain by Precambrian basement rocks consisting mainly of porphyroblastic gneisses, granitic‐gneisses, migmatitic gneisses, amphibolites, Pan‐African granites and undifferentiated schists. The geology of Abuja, therefore, makes the groundwater conditions in the area very unpredictable. Geophysical surveys were carried out at 12 locations within and around the Gosa area and the results integrated with 88 lineament (fractures) extracted from hill‐shaded Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data. The dominant fracture trend for the area is NNE–SSW and N–S, which corresponds to the Pan‐African trends in the basement complex of Nigeria. It is observed that in the Gosa area, whereas fractures exist, they do not possess sufficient interconnectivity; this may have adversely affected the permeability of the fractured zone, resulting in the incidence of dry wells in the area. Moreover, evidence from interpreted two‐dimensional (2D) geoelectric sections reveals that in some parts of Abuja, the weathered overburden is not thick enough to support sufficient yield for a viable borehole. Interconnected fractures therefore become the desirable structural feature capable of improving the aquifer potential. This study demonstrates the usefulness of integrating conventional vertical electrical sounding (VES) surveys with structural data derived from enhanced SRTM imagery in a hydrologically complicated terrain.

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