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Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

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Journal of Applied Geophysics


journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jappgeo

Characterization of a dismissed landll via electrical resistivity


tomography and mise--la-masse method
Lorenzo De Carlo a, Maria Teresa Perri b,, Maria Clementina Caputo a, Rita Deiana c,
Michele Vurro a, Giorgio Cassiani b
a
b
c

Water Research Institute (IRSA), CNR, Bari, Italy


Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Universit di Padova, Italy
Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali: archeologia, storia dell'arte, del cinema e della musica, Universit di Padova, Italy

a r t i c l e

i n f o

Article history:
Received 13 December 2012
Accepted 27 July 2013
Available online 3 August 2013
Keywords:
Landll
Connement
Electrical methods
Forward modeling

a b s t r a c t
Electrical resistivity methods are widely used for environmental applications, and they are particularly useful for the
characterization and monitoring of sites where the presence of contamination requires a thorough understanding
of the location and movement of water, that can act as a carrier of solutes. One such application is landll studies,
where the strong electrical contrasts between waste, leachate and surrounding formations make electrical methods
a nearly ideal tool for investigation. In spite of the advantages, however, electrical investigation of landlls poses
also challenges, both logistical and interpretational. This paper presents the results of a study conducted on a
dismissed landll, close to the city of Corigliano d'Otranto, in the Apulia region (Southern Italy). The landll is located in an abandoned quarry, that was subsequently re-utilized about thirty years ago as a site for urban waste disposal. The waste was thought to be more than 20 m thick, and the landll bottom was expected to be conned
with an HDPE (high-density poli-ethylene) liner. During the digging operations performed to build a nearby new
landll, leachate was found, triggering an in-depth investigation including also non-invasive methods. The principal
goal was to verify whether the leachate is indeed conned, and to what extent, by the HDPE liner. We performed
both surface electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) and mise--la-masse (MALM) surveys, facing the severe challenges posed by the rugged terrain of the abandoned quarry complex. A conductive body, probably associated with
leachate, was found as deep as 40 m below the current landll surface i.e. at a depth much larger than the expected
20 m thickness of waste. Given the logistical difculties that limit the geometry of acquisition, we utilized synthetic
forward modeling in order to conrm/dismiss interpretational hypotheses emerging from the ERT and MALM results. This integration between measurements and modeling helped narrow the alternative interpretations and
strengthened the condence in results, conrming the effectiveness of non-invasive methods in landll investigation and the importance of modeling in the interpretation of geophysical results.
2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

1. Introduction
Landlls can have a strong impact on the surrounding environment,
mainly in relation to the possible leakage of contaminated uids into the
subsoil and groundwater. Landll leachate is generally very saline, rich
in organic matter, and electrically conductive. Therefore it is no surprise
that geophysical, and particularly electrical, techniques have long been
used as diagnostic tools for the visualization of landll impacts in
the shallow subsurface. Geophysics has the competitive advantage
of being minimally-invasive, inexpensive and fast while still providing good resolution at the eld scale. Note that the alternative use
of direct methods, such as drilling and sampling, implies the considerable

risk of damaging the landll liners and creating new pathways for contaminant migration. Moreover, the application of electrical resistivity
methods to the characterization of municipal waste landlls has become
popular also because the electrical resistivity of waste varies considerably with time due to waste decomposition and leachate formation.
Since the mid 1990s a large number of studies have appeared in the
scientic and technical literature dealing with the application of geophysical methods to landll characterization. The majority of studies
involve the use of electrical and electromagnetic methods, mainly
motivated by the strong electrical conductivity contrast guaranteed by
landll leachate. But also (refraction) seismics has been used to identify
the landll structure. The most widely used techniques are:

Corresponding author. Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Universit di Padova, Padova, via


Gradenigo 6, 35131, Italy. Tel.: +39 338 6251593; fax: +39 049 8279134.
E-mail addresses: lorenzo.decarlo@ba.irsa.cnr.it (L. De Carlo), mariateresa.perri@unipd.it
(M.T. Perri), maria.caputo@ba.irsa.cnr.it (M.C. Caputo), rita.deiana@unipd.it (R. Deiana),
michele.vurro@ba.irsa.cnr.it (M. Vurro), giorgio.cassiani@unipd.it (G. Cassiani).

DC electrical methods and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT)


(Aristodemou and Thomas-Betts, 2000; Binley and Daily, 2003; Buselli
and Lu, 2001; Cardarelli and Bernabini, 1997; Carpenter et al., 1991;
Cassiani and Medina, 1997; Cassiani et al., 2006; Faraco Gallas et al.,
2011; Frid et al., 2008, 2010; Frolich et al., 1994, 1996; Johansson

0926-9851/$ see front matter 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jappgeo.2013.07.010

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

et al., 2011; Khalil, 2012; Mota et al., 2004; Porsani et al., 2004; Senos
Matias et al., 1994).
Electromagnetic induction methods (Al-Tarazi et al., 2008; Buselli and
Lu, 2001; Monteiro Santos et al., 2006; Nobes et al., 2000; Noguera
et al., 2002; Olofsson et al., 2006; Senos Matias et al., 1994;
Triantalis et al., 2011).
Ground penetrating radar (GPR) (Cassiani et al., 2008; Hermozilha
et al., 2010; Olofsson et al., 2006; Porsani et al., 2004).
Induced polarization (Aristodemou and Thomas-Betts, 2000; Bavusi
et al., 2006; Buselli and Lu, 2001; Faraco Gallas et al., 2011; Fiandaca
et al., 2012; Gazoty et al., 2012; Leroux et al., 2007).
Self-potential (Bavusi et al., 2006; Buselli and Lu, 2001; Faraco Gallas
et al., 2011; Mota et al., 2004; Naudet et al., 2003, 2004).
Refraction seismics (Cardarelli and Bernabini, 1997; Carpenter et al.,
1991; De Iaco et al., 2003; Lanz et al., 1998).

The application of geophysical techniques to landlls, as for many


other environmental problems, involves tackling two different,
complementary issues (see e.g. Binley et al., 2011), namely:
(a) structural (static) characterization
(b) uid-dynamics, including the motion of contaminants.
These two categories nd more specic implementation for the landll problems as follows:
landll structure identication (Bernstone and Dahlin, 1996a,b;
Bernstone et al., 2000; Chambers et al., 2006; Ogilvy et al., 2002);
liner integrity and leakage localization (Binley et al., 1997; White and
Barker, 1997);
leachate migration monitoring (Acworth and Jorstad, 2006; Clement
et al., 2010, 2011; Gurin et al., 2004; Olofsson et al., 2006; Radulescu
et al., 2007; Soupios et al., 2007a, b; Zume et al., 2006);
moisture content distribution and age of waste assessment (Acworth
and Jorstad, 2006; Cassiani et al., 2008; Frolich et al., 1994, 1996;
Imhoff et al., 2007; Meju, 2000);
localization of gas migration pathways (Georgaki et al., 2008; Johansson
et al., 2011).
Possibly the most common single issue to be tackled in landll studies
is the connement of waste and leachate within the landll boundaries.
The evaluation of this connement often requires non-invasive investigations that do not jeopardize the landll integrity itself. Consequently,

geophysics is generally applied from the land surface, i.e. not in borehole
applications. This acquisition conguration is not ideal in terms of resolution at the relevant depth of investigation, that can exceed a few tens of
meters. Therefore much reliance is placed upon the reliability of inversion
approaches to image the landll subsurface.
In particular, most of the above studies have shown that surface
electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) is a suitable method to study
resistivity distribution in landlls at the suitable spatial scale (ten to
hundreds of meters wide and down to 30 m depth). Time-lapse ERT
has also been considered to monitor the state of landll material
particularly when uid recirculation is a waste treatment option
(Clment et al., 2010, 2011; Gurin et al., 2004; Radulescu et al.,
2007). Note that the use of borehole ERT (Perri et al., 2012) at landlls
is obviously difcult given the necessary attention towards keeping
the liner integrity.
The logistical limitations of surface ERT applications on landlls
imply that other, less sophisticated, resistivity techniques can also
be useful to complete the overall dataset, even though by themselves they are inherently weak. One such technique is the classical
mise--la-masse (MALM) technique. This is an electrical resistivity
method that has been used particularly in the mining industry for
nearly a century (e.g. Schlumberger, 1920) to delineate conductive ore
bodies: a current electrode is placed in the conductive body (either at
a surface exposure or in a drill hole), with a second current electrode
posed at a large distance (theoretically at innity). The equi-potential
contour lines can be mapped and their shape can give information on
the shape of the conductive body. The same approach can be used also
for saline tracer test monitoring over time, injecting current in the
conductive plume body and monitoring its evolution (e.g. Nimmer and
Osiensky, 2002; Osiensky, 1997). A similar approach can be used to
map any conductive body, including landll waste this indeed is the
basis for landll liner integrity tests (Binley et al., 1997; White and
Barker, 1997).
In consideration of the logistical limitations and the consequent
limits in data collection, the available data shall be exploited to their
maximum information content. One way of exploiting data of limited
nature, that are insufcient to yield a unique inverted image of reality,
is to compare them against the predictions of geophysical forward
models constructed on the basis of alternative scenarios. In this respect,
remarkable work has been conducted in the eld of landll characterization by Radulescu et al. (2007) and Clment et al. (2010, 2011).

Fig. 1. The landll area at Corigliano d'Otranto with the position of the borehole P4.
(Image source: Google Earth).

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

In this paper we present the case study of a dismissed quarry, located


in the city of Corigliano d'Otranto, in the Apulia region (Southern Italy),
utilized some thirty years ago for municipal waste disposal.
Our objectives are:
a. to present the results of an effective non-invasive characterization of
an abandoned landll site, based on both ERT and MALM methods,
with the main goal of conrming or dismissing the presence of a
bottom liner, and possible leachate migration from the landll.
b. to present the use and value of electrical forward modeling for the
full exploitation of data information content, and the discrimination
between possible alternative scenarios.

2. Study area
The test site comprises a dismissed quarry in Southern Italy, located
in the north-western part of the municipality of Corigliano d'Otranto,
about 2 km away from the town and about 20 km from the Adriatic
sea (Fig. 1). In the late 1980s municipal waste disposal was authorized
in the dismissed quarry. The waste thickness is thought to be more
than 20 m thick, and the landll bottom is thought to be conned by
an HDPE (high density poly-ethylene) liner: evidence of the liner presence can indeed be observed on site only along the SW border of the
landll. The landll is covered with a thin layer of topsoil.
Near the site a new landll is currently being built, exploiting the
volume that is made available by another part of the dismissed quarry.
During the digging operations, leachate emerged at the base of the
scarp separating the old landll from the new one (Fig. 1).
This evidence of leachate migration triggered a detailed study of the
area in order to assess the possibility and seriousness of groundwater
and subsoil contamination. The study area has a signicant value not
only from an environmental point of view, but also mainly for social
health aspects because many wells, both for drinkable use and irrigation, are located close to the landll. Previous studies carried out in
the study area were inconclusive regarding the local groundwater
ow direction, given the very small hydraulic gradient of the water
table.

From a geological point of view, the bedrock is formed by a Cretaceous carbonatic platform, of some thousands meters thick, characterized by dolomitic, karstied and vacuolar limestone.
The Mesozoic basement is covered by Miocenic and Plio-Pleistocenic
deposits constituted by calcarenite lithofacies having different structural, textural and, consequently, hydraulic properties. These deposits are
outcropping in the study area, as shown in Fig. 2. Locally the thickness
of the Plio-Pleistocenic deposits is about 100 m, as shown by the stratigraphy of one among the many boreholes performed before the building
of the landlls, particularly the one close to the boundary between old
and new landll, P4 in Fig. 1, reported in Table 1.
Several injection tests have been performed at different depths
during the drilling, and the corresponding permeability values are
reported in Table 1 too. The hydrogeology of the area is characterized
from double-layers aquifer: the shallow lies in the Plio-Plistocenic
deposits and has reduced its storage in the last decade due to the
overexploitation of the groundwater. The main aquifer is the deeper
one, which lies in the Cretaceous carbonatic rocks, characterized from
fracture and karst permeability. This aquifer, generally phreatic, in the
study area is conned from the upper layer characterized by low permeability due to the absence of fractures. This is why the water table
was found at 115 meter depth during the drilling and subsequently
has reached the static level at 80 m below the ground surface.
3. Field surveys
The key issue to be solved at the Corigliano landll site is the existence, extent, integrity and effectiveness of the HDPE liner at the bottom
of the old landll. Given the risk associated to direct investigations, that
can worsen the situation of the waste connement within the landll,
non-invasive (geophysical) investigations are the methods chosen to
solve the problem. Between May and June 2010, 2D ERT lines and a
MALM survey have been conducted at the site. The locations of the
ERT lines and the MALM conguration are shown in Fig. 3. The whole
area is fairly wide and locally impervious, and big efforts have been devoted particularly to acquire geophysical data along the scarp that connects the old and the new landll (Fig. 4). Note that the entire landll
complex is fenced, and the area to its East is also composed of an old,

Fig. 2. Schematic geological map of the Apulia region.

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

Table 1
Stratigraphy of the borehole P4 with the results of the performed injection tests at
different depths.
Measurement sections
(in meters below ground surface)

Storativity
S

Trasmissivity
T (m2/s)

Permeability
Kz (m/s)

010
Uggiano la Chiesa sands
(Plio-Pleistocene)
1020
Uggiano la Chiesa sands
(Plio-Pleistocene)
2430
Calcarenites of Andrano
(Plio-Pleistocene)
3044.5
Calcarenites of Andrano
(Plio-Pleistocene)
44.560
Pietra Leccese (Miocene)
6069.7
Pietra Leccese (Miocene)
69.7110
Pietra Leccese (Miocene)
110120
Dolomie of Galatina (Cretaceous)

2.00E-04

1.02E-04

5.10E-05

No collected data due to the presence of large


fractures
1.06E-03

6.70E-04

3.35E-04

5.0E-3

5.58E-05

2.79E-05

2.0E-3

7.53E-06

3.77E-06

3.5E-4

1.86E-05

9.30E-06

2.00E-03

6.14E-06

1.54E-06

Injection test not performed

dismissed landll. The presence of the motorway running to the North


East of the site also limits accessibility for electrical measurements. The
only area, outside of the quarry complex, that allows free access is the
agricultural land to its SouthWest, that is, however, separated by the
road and a high wall. Therefore, even though the area is mostly at
around the quarry complex, access for geo-electrical work is not easily
guaranteed. High values of contact resistance (often larger than
20 kOhm), particularly in the areas void of vegetation (see white areas
in Fig. 3), implied the need to wet the electrodes in order to improve
the measurement quality.

Fig. 4. Electrodes installation along the scarp which divides the old from the new landll.

3.1. Electrical resistivity tomography


Considering the logistical limitations, we elected to concentrate our
efforts on a few, signicant ERT survey lines that have sufcient length
as to image the subsurface to a sufcient depth, i.e. over 20 m and
down to 40 m below the ground surface. We also collected shorter
ERT lines, that could be extended on the at portion of the old landll,
coinciding with the extent of the MALM lines shown in Fig. 3. But
these shorter lines cannot be inverted reliably for depths larger than
the 20 m of the expected waste thickness. Therefore they add practically nothing to our understanding of the site structure, and are not
discussed here.
As shown in Fig. 3, two ERT proles, named Line 1 and Line 2, were
collected inside the landll complex in order to evaluate the thickness

Fig. 3. Location of the ERT and MALM measurements carried out at the Corigliano site. The red dashed lines represent the 2D ERT proles, while the orange dots indicate the location of the
potential electrodes used for the MALM survey. The MALM survey has been completed with voltage measurements also along Line 2 and Line 3. Current was injected between electrodes A
and B, and voltage was measured with reference to electrode P. (For interpretation of the references to color in this gure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)
(Image source: Google Earth).

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

of the waste in the old quarry. Line 2 covers both the old and the new
landlls, cutting across the main topographic feature of the site, i.e.
the scarp sloping from the old landll to the bottom of the nearby quarry to be used for the new landll (Fig. 4). On the contrary, Line 1 runs
horizontally along the dirt road separating the old and new landlls,
and extends laterally beyond in order to reach a suitable depth of investigation. Line 3 was conducted outside the landll to obtain resistivity
data of the undisturbed geological layers not involved by waste disposal.
The line runs in the agricultural eld, parallel to the local road anking
the landll complex to the SouthEast. A comparison between Lines 1
and 2 on one hand and Line 3 on the other hand is a rst necessary
check of the impact of the existing landll on the resistivity structure
of the subsurface.
All three resistivity lines were acquired using a 235 m long array of
48 stainless steel electrodes with 5 m spacing. An IRIS Syscal Pro 48
resistivity meter was used to collect more than 2000 resistance
quadripole for each prole, by running full direct and reciprocal data
acquisition to ensure a correct error estimation (Binley et al., 1995). A
WennerSchlumberger conguration was used because it offers a
reasonable compromise between resolution and investigation depth.
Using this set-up all three lines reached an approximated depth of
investigation of 40 m from the ground surface.
3.2. Mise--la-masse
In order to complement the information obtained from ERT, a MALM
survey was also carried out covering most of the available surface inside
and outside of the landll complex. The geometry of the MALM survey
aims at identifying current pathways between the inner and outer
parts of the landll, thus checking the existence and continuity of the
HDPE liner that is, at the same time, a hydraulic barrier and an electrical
insulator (Binley et al., 1997; White and Barker, 1997). Therefore one
current electrode (A in Fig. 3) is located inside the landll, and the
other one (B in Fig. 3) is outside. All voltage measurements are referred
to the same electrode (P in Fig. 3) thus producing a voltage map that
shall indicate the presence of current pathways. Fig. 3 shows the
locations of the MALM voltage electrodes, partly following 7 alignments
with 2 m spacing (orange dotted lines) and partly reproducing the
alignments of ERT Lines 2 and 3, with 5 m spacing. Note that the two
shorter alignments located to the SouthWest are next to each other
but on either side of the HDPE liner that in that area visible at the ground
surface.
4. Field results
ERT data were inverted using the code ProleR (A. Binley Lancaster
University), an inverse solution for a 2-D resistivity distribution based
on computation of 3-D current ow using a quadrilateral nite element
mesh. The inverse solution is based on a regularised objective function
combined with weighted least squares, as dened in Binley and
Kemna (2005). As a complete reciprocal acquisition scheme was
adopted, we could make a correct estimation of measurement errors,
and thus we decided to use only the data satisfying a maximum 10%
reciprocal error. The same corresponding error value was used to
drive the inverse procedure.
The results of ERT surveys provide a clear evidence of the effect that
the landll material has on the electrical resistivity structure of the subsurface. Line 3 (Fig. 5), placed outside the landll, shows a very regular
distribution of electrical resistivity across the entire section, compatible
with unsaturated sands and limestone. On the contrary, Lines 1 and 2
(Fig. 6a and b, respectively) show the presence of a strong heterogeneity
induced by the old landll waste. Both Lines 1 and 2 show the presence
of an electrically conductive body (with log10 resistivity approximately
below 1.6 m), presumably representing the landll waste. However
the bottom of this conductive body appears to be much shallower in
Line 1 (about 20 m below ground) than in Line 2 (over 40 m below

ground). This apparent contradiction is in fact a geometric effect: Line


1 violates the assumption, always made in 2D ERT, that the resistivity
distribution is the same for all vertical planes parallel to the vertical
plane crossing the acquisition line. The presence of the very steep
scarp (Fig. 4) on the North-Western side of Line 1 clearly makes the
assumption invalid and makes it impossible to interpret quantitatively
the subsurface model in terms on relevant depths and resistivity values.
On the contrary, Line 2, which cuts the scarp along its maximum slope,
provides a quantitative interpretation of the electrical properties of the
subsurface. The conductive body shows an irregular shape and its
bottom is more than 40 m deep from the top of the old landll surface,
thus well below the bottom of the known abandoned quarry (20 m
from the surface the same depth as the bottom of the nearby new
landll).
The evidence from Line 2 might indicate that the waste body is
much thicker than the originally supposed (20 m) or, more likely,
that a vertical migration of conductive leachate penetrates the supposedly impermeable landll bottom. The possible leachate plume
is more pronounced to the North, in accordance with the evidence
of leachate emergence at the base of the scarp.
In apparent contradiction with the ERT results, the MALM survey
produced a map that is showing a sharp voltage jump in correspondence of the limits of the old landll, in particular across the visible
emergence of the HDPE liner along the SouthWest boundary (Fig. 7).
However, given the poor connement close to ground surface (no
other evidence of the liner is present except for the SouthWest boundary) it is no surprise that the electrical current can circumvent the barrier, at least close to the surface to the North, and close to the circuit.
Therefore, a qualitative inspection of the map in Fig. 7, by itself, cannot
either conrm or dismiss the existence of an HDPE liner capable of
limiting, if not totally excluding, leachate migration at depth.
The apparent partial contradiction of evidence from ERT and MALM
surveys calls denitely for a quantitative modeling approach that can
help discriminate possible scenarios.
5. Synthetic modeling
In order to assimilate all the collected data into a comprehensive
quantitative framework, that can help discriminate between alternative
interpretation scenarios, we constructed a three-dimensional resistivity
model of the Corigliano landll site, including the variable topography.
As far as the subsurface structure is concerned, we exploited the information directly available from the ERT eld acquisitions (see Fig. 6)
and developed rst of all a reasonable 3D reference model (Fig. 8).
This reference model includes four regions:
(1) a region representing the waste body with a log10 resistivity
value equal to 1 m;
(2) a region with a very high log10 resistivity value (6 m)
representing the HDPE liner;
(3) a region representing the undisturbed Uggiano La Chiesa Sands,
characterized by a log10 resistivity value equal to 2.845 m;

Fig. 5. Electrical resistivity tomography along Line 3. The z axis is expressed in meters
below the ground surface.

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

Fig. 6. Electrical resistivity tomography images along Line 1 (a) and Line 2 (b). The z axis is expressed in meters below the ground surface. Line 1 and Line 2 cross each other almost in their
medium point, as indicated by the black narrows on the top of the sections. Note the strong scale difference between the surveys runs within the landll (Line 1 and Line 2) and outside
(Line 3 Fig. 5).

(4) a region representing the soil layer, with a log10 resistivity value
equal to1.3 m.
Subsequently, several 3D forward solutions have been calculated
starting from such a reference model, but taking into consideration various scenarios and, in particular, different integrity conditions of the
HDPE liner, as described hereafter.
Each electrical resistivity 3D model can be used to produce synthetic
resistance datasets for ERT acquisitions and synthetic voltage maps for
MALM surveys. The synthetic ERT resistance datasets have been created
with the same scheme and geometry adopted in the eld, and inverted
to produce resistivity images that can be compared directly with the

Fig. 7. Map of MALM voltage distribution in the old landll. The values are expressed in
mV/A (the voltage values are standardized by the corresponding current values).

ones produced with eld data. Note that, in order to take into account
the same error level of that calculated for the eld measurements, before performing 2D ERT inversion a Gaussian noise equal to 10% has
been added to every synthetic dataset. The synthetic MALM voltage
maps can be compared directly with the one measured in the eld.
The 3D forward modeling for ERT and MALM surveys was performed
using the code R3t (A. Binley Lancaster University). The inversions for
2D ERT problems were computed using the code ProleR, as described in
the previous section for eld data. The mesh that has been considered
for 3D problems consists of an unstructured tetrahedral mesh, which includes a total of 268,504 elements; the quadrilateral mesh that was used
in 2D synthetic modeling is the same of that implemented for the eld
dataset.

Fig. 8. A section of the 3D reference model of the Corigliano d'Otranto landll in terms of
electrical resistivity (in log10 m scale) .
(Image visualized by ParaView).

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

understanding of the level of damage that the liner must have


suffered and the consequences for possible subsoil contamination.
In particular, we considered a landll with a damaged HDPE liner, as
shown in Fig. 11. The effects on the electrical resistivity distribution in
the subsurface due to the damaged structure and the probable vertical
migration of a very conductive leachate below the HDPE level are apparent. The direct comparison between the real ERT prole of Fig. 6 and the
simulated ERT prole of Fig. 11 seems to corroborate the hypothesis of a
lack of connement by the liner and a migration of conductive leachate
through the supposedly impermeable barrier. The MALM map obtained
in this case is shown in Fig. 12: no strong difference between the maps
of voltage distribution of Figs. 10 and 12 is visible. This points towards
the lack of resolution and reliability that conclusions based on MALM
alone can give.
Finally, we considered a case study where leachate accumulation is
due to an absence of effective facilities for rainwater interception and
leachate drainage. In particular, we supposed that a very low resistive
leachate (log10 () = 0, in m) wets the deepest waste level and migrates through the liner damage into the underlying vadose zone. The
migration of leachate is only reproduced by placing a body of low resistivity also below the liner, while the leachate ow is not simulated. The
key results related to the relevant simulated ERT survey are shown in
Fig. 13. In this scenario, the differences between the real ERT prole of
Fig. 6 and the simulated ERT prole of Fig. 13 are even smaller than
for the scenario in Fig. 11, thus pointing towards the likely presence of
a substantial leachate volume also below the liner. With regard to
MALM survey, the map of voltage distribution obtained considering
this model is shown in Fig. 14. Note again that there are no signicant,
diagnostic variations with respect to the maps presented in Figs. 10
and 12. Again, we have to conclude for the weak sensitivity of the
MALM method, in the adopted conguration, towards liner discontinuities at the bottom of the landll.

6. Discussion and conclusions


Fig. 9. Simulated ERT image (b) related to the scenario where the bottom liner is considered to be continuous and undamaged (a).

5.1. Undamaged HDPE liner


The rst case discussed here considers the presence of an undamaged
liner at the bottom of the landll. The synthetic ERT results obtained for
this case are shown in Fig. 9, where a detail of the HDPE liner structure
as hypothesized in the 3D model is also presented.
The synthetic ERT results for this scenario demonstrate that the low
resistive region related to the waste mass, about 20 m thick in the 3D
model, is well imaged to its real depth in the ERT inversion.
A comparison between the real ERT prole in Fig. 6 and the synthetic
ERT prole in Fig. 9 leads rapidly to the conclusion that the hypothesis of
the presence of an intact liner can be reasonably excluded.
The map of MALM voltage distribution obtained considering this
model is shown in Fig. 10. The values of voltage (in mV/A) are quite similar to those measured in the eld (Fig. 7). An incomplete correspondence
between the real and the simulated results is justiable as the exact
values of resistivity distribution in the eld is not reproduced in the 3D
model. The electrical barrier due to the presence of HDPE is however evident in the sharp step of electrical potential along the SW border of the
landll, as in the eld case. Therefore the MALM results are, unlike the
ERT results, not in contradiction with the hypothesis of an undamaged
liner.
5.2. Damaged HDPE liner
Given the results obtained in the rst example, different scenarios have been subsequently examined in an attempt of rening our

The use of geophysical methods is particularly useful in characterizing complex structures, such as dismissed landlls, when direct investigations are infeasible of risk. These sites are difcult to characterize
using direct investigations, above all concerning the check of the integrity of the HDPE liner, placed at the bottom of the structure. In this case,
geophysics, and electrical methods in particular, can obtain spatially distributed information over large areas with good resolution.

Fig. 10. Simulated MALM map related to the scenario where the bottom liner is considered
to be continuous and undamaged. The red dashed line represents the contour of the simulated liner close to the surface. (For interpretation of the references to color in this gure
legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

Fig. 11. Simulated ERT image (b) related to the scenario where the bottom liner is damaged and limited vertical migration of leachate is present (a).

The results in this paper largely conrm the above considerations,


showing the results of applying two geo-electrical methods (ERT and
MALM) to a dismissed landll, where the logistical constraints limit

Fig. 12. Simulated MALM map related to the scenario where the bottom liner is damaged
and limited vertical migration of leachate is present. The red dashed line represents the
contour of the simulated liner close to the surface. (For interpretation of the references
to color in this gure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)

also the applicability of geophysics in general. In particular, ERT proles


and MALM measurements have been collected inside and outside the
landll in order to verify the thickness of the waste, evaluate the integrity of the HDPE liner and visualize possible preferential pathways of
leachate in the underlying vadose zone.
The ERT results show the presence of a conductive body, having irregular shape and associated to the landll material, that reaches
40 m depth from the surface, a depth larger of 20 m than the expected
waste thickness. This result could be explained considering a vertical
migration of conductive landll leachate through the landll bottom,
made of HDPE liner, supposedly impermeable.
The MALM measurements, on the other hand, seem to indicate that
the liner is present and relatively continuous, even though some current
from inside to outside of the landll has been recorded this however
could be linked solely to a lack of insulation in the shallow layer covering the waste mass.
Given the partial inconclusiveness of the eld results, partly due to
the logistical limitations encountered in the geophysical data acquisition, we resorted to the support of 3D geo-electrical forward modeling,
in order to discriminate the likelihood of different possible scenarios.
The support given by this forward modeling proved extremely valuable,
as it pointed clearly towards the effectiveness of ERT results at identifying the presence of a damage in the liner with very likely leachate
migration in the subsoil. At the same time, the forward modeling proved
that the MALM approach, in the given conguration, could not resolve
the presence of a damage in the liner located at the bottom of the
landll.

L. De Carlo et al. / Journal of Applied Geophysics 98 (2013) 110

Fig. 13. Simulated ERT image (b) related to the scenario where the bottom liner is damaged and a very low resistive leachate wets the deepest waste level and penetrates below the liner (a).

As a general conclusion, we strongly endorse the use of forward


modeling both in the interpretation phase (as shown here), and also
in the design phase of any survey that has a clearly identiable goal
from the outset.

Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Giuseppe Bagnolo for his help in acquiring geophysical data along the scarp.
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Fig. 14. Simulated MALM map related to the scenario where the bottom liner is damaged
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liner. The red dashed line represents the contour of the simulated liner close to the surface.
(For interpretation of the references to color in this gure legend, the reader is referred to
the web version of this article.)

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