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Dive into the research topics where Carole D. Johnson is active.

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Featured researches published by Carole D. Johnson.


Geophysics | 2006

Delineating a shallow fault zone and dipping bedrock strata using multichannal analysis of surface waves with a land streamer

Julian Ivanov; Richard D. Miller; Pierre J. Lacombe; Carole D. Johnson; John W. Lane

The multichannel analysis of surface waves (MASW) seismic method was used to delineate a fault zone and gently dipping sedimentary bedrock at a site overlain by several meters of regolith. Seismic data were collected rapidly and inexpensively using a towed 30-channel land streamer and a rubberband-accelerated weight-drop seismic source. Data processed using the MASW method imaged the subsurface to a depth of about 20 m and allowed detection of the overburden, gross bedding features, and fault zone. The fault zone was characterized by a lower shear-wave velocity ( Vs ) than the competent bedrock, consistent with a large-scale fault, secondary fractures, and in-situ weathering. The MASW 2D Vs section was further interpreted to identify dipping beds consistent with local geologic mapping. Mapping of shallow-fault zones and dipping sedimentary rock substantially extends the applications of the MASW method.


Geophysics | 2006

Continuous resistivity profiling to delineate submarine groundwater discharge—examples and limitations

Frederick D. Day-Lewis; Eric A. White; Carole D. Johnson; John W. Lane; M. Belaval

Aquifer-ocean interaction, saline intrusion, and submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) are emerging topics in hydrology and oceanography with important implications for water-resource management and estuarine ecology. Although the threat of saltwater intrusion has long been recognized in coastal areas, SGD has, until recently, received much less attention. It is clear that SGD constitutes a major nutrient flux to coastal waters, with implications for estuarine ecology, eutrophication, and loss of coral reefs; however, fundamental questions regarding SGD remain unanswered: What are the spatial and temporal distributions of SGD offshore? How do seasonal and storm-related variations in aquifer recharge affect SGD flux and nutrient loading? What controls do aquifer structure and heterogeneity impose? How are SGD and saline recirculation related? Geophysical methods can provide insights to help answer these questions and improve the understanding of this intriguing and environmentally relevant hydrologic pheno...


Ground Water | 2013

A Small-Diameter NMR Logging Tool for Groundwater Investigations

David O. Walsh; Peter Turner; Elliot Grunewald; Hong Zhang; James J. Butler; E. C. Reboulet; Steve Knobbe; Tom Christy; John W. Lane; Carole D. Johnson; Tim Munday; Andrew Fitzpatrick

A small-diameter nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) logging tool has been developed and field tested at various sites in the United States and Australia. A novel design approach has produced relatively inexpensive, small-diameter probes that can be run in open or PVC-cased boreholes as small as 2 inches in diameter. The complete system, including surface electronics and various downhole probes, has been successfully tested in small-diameter monitoring wells in a range of hydrogeological settings. A variant of the probe that can be deployed by a direct-push machine has also been developed and tested in the field. The new NMR logging tool provides reliable, direct, and high-resolution information that is of importance for groundwater studies. Specifically, the technology provides direct measurement of total water content (total porosity in the saturated zone or moisture content in the unsaturated zone), and estimates of relative pore-size distribution (bound vs. mobile water content) and hydraulic conductivity. The NMR measurements show good agreement with ancillary data from lithologic logs, geophysical logs, and hydrogeologic measurements, and provide valuable information for groundwater investigations.


Ground Water | 2011

A Computer Program for Flow-Log Analysis of Single Holes (FLASH)

Frederick D. Day-Lewis; Carole D. Johnson; Frederick L. Paillet; Keith J. Halford

A new computer program, FLASH (Flow-Log Analysis of Single Holes), is presented for the analysis of borehole vertical flow logs. The code is based on an analytical solution for steady-state multilayer radial flow to a borehole. The code includes options for (1) discrete fractures and (2) multilayer aquifers. Given vertical flow profiles collected under both ambient and stressed (pumping or injection) conditions, the user can estimate fracture (or layer) transmissivities and far-field hydraulic heads. FLASH is coded in Microsoft Excel(5) with Visual Basic for Applications routines. The code supports manual and automated model calibration.


Ground Water | 2016

Imaging Pathways in Fractured Rock Using Three-Dimensional Electrical Resistivity Tomography

Judith Robinson; Lee Slater; Timothy J. Johnson; Allen M. Shapiro; Claire R. Tiedeman; Dimitrios Ntarlagiannis; Carole D. Johnson; Frederick D. Day-Lewis; Pierre J. Lacombe; Thomas E. Imbrigiotta; John W. Lane

Major challenges exist in delineating bedrock fracture zones because these cause abrupt changes in geological and hydrogeological properties over small distances. Borehole observations cannot sufficiently capture heterogeneity in these systems. Geophysical techniques offer the potential to image properties and processes in between boreholes. We used three-dimensional cross borehole electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) in a 9 m (diameter) × 15 m well field to capture high-resolution flow and transport processes in a fractured mudstone contaminated by chlorinated solvents, primarily trichloroethylene. Conductive (sodium bromide) and resistive (deionized water) injections were monitored in seven boreholes. Electrode arrays with isolation packers and fluid sampling ports were designed to enable acquisition of ERT measurements during pulsed tracer injections. Fracture zone locations and hydraulic pathways inferred from hydraulic head drawdown data were compared with electrical conductivity distributions from ERT measurements. Static ERT imaging has limited resolution to decipher individual fractures; however, these images showed alternating conductive and resistive zones, consistent with alternating laminated and massive mudstone units at the site. Tracer evolution and migration was clearly revealed in time-lapse ERT images and supported by in situ borehole vertical apparent conductivity profiles collected during the pulsed tracer test. While water samples provided important local information at the extraction borehole, ERT delineated tracer migration over spatial scales capturing the primary hydrogeological heterogeneity controlling flow and transport. The fate of these tracer injections at this scale could not have been quantified using borehole logging and/or borehole sampling methods alone.


Ground Water | 2016

A Fractured Rock Geophysical Toolbox Method Selection Tool.

Frederick D. Day-Lewis; Carole D. Johnson; Lee Slater; Judy Robinson; John H. Williams; C.L. Boyden; D. Dale Werkema; John W. Lane

F.D. Day-Lewis (corresponding author), U.S. Geological Survey, 11 Sherman Place, Unit 5015, Storrs CT 06269, [email protected] C.D. Johnson, U.S. Geological Survey, 11 Sherman Place, Unit 5015, Storrs CT 06269, [email protected] L.D. Slater, Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University Newark, 101 Warren Street, Smith 135, Newark NJ 07102, [email protected] J.L. Robinson, Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University Newark, 101 Warren Street, Smith 135, Newark NJ 07102, [email protected] J.H. Williams, U.S. Geological Survey, New York Water Science Center, 425 Jordan Rd., Troy, NY 12180, [email protected] C.L. Boyden, Former intern, U.S. Geological Survey, 11 Sherman Place, Unit 5015, Storrs CT 06269, [email protected] D. Werkema, Environmental Sciences Division, Characterization and Monitoring Branch, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, 944 E. Harmon Ave., Las Vegas, NV 89119, [email protected] J.W. Lane, Jr., U.S. Geological Survey, 11 Sherman Place, Unit 5015, Storrs CT 06269, [email protected] Conflict of interest: None


International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences | 1997

Borehole sampling of fracture populations-compensating for borehole sampling bias in crystalline bedrock aquifers, Mirror Lake, Grafton County, New Hampshire

Gregory D. McDonald; Frederick L. Paillet; Christopher C. Barton; Carole D. Johnson

Abstract The clustering of orientations of hydraulically conductive fractures in bedrock at the Mirror Lake, New Hampshire fractured rock study site was investigated by comparing the orientations of fracture populations in two subvertical borehole arrays with those mapped on four adjacent subvertical roadcuts. In the boreholes and the roadcuts, the orientation of fracture populations appears very similar after borehole data are compensated for undersampling of steeply dipping fractures. Compensated borehole and pavement fracture data indicate a northeast-striking population of fractures with varying dips concentrated near that of the local foliation in the adjacent rock. The data show no correlation between fracture density (fractures/linear meter) and distance from lithologic contacts in both the boreholes and the roadcuts. The population of water-producing borehole fractures is too small (28 out of 610 fractures) to roadcuts. The population comparisons. However, the orientation of large aperture fractures (which contains all the producing fractures) contains two or three subsidiary clusters in orientation frequency that are not evident in stereographic projections of the entire population containing all aperture sizes. Further, these subsidiary orientation clusters do not coincide with the dominant (subhorizontal and subvertical) regional fracture orientations.


Ground Water | 2014

Detecting well casing leaks in Bangladesh using a salt spiking method

Mason O. Stahl; J.B. Ong; Charles F. Harvey; Carole D. Johnson; A.B.M. Badruzzaman; M.H. Tarek; A. van Geen; J.A. Anderson; J.W. Lane

We apply fluid-replacement logging in arsenic-contaminated regions of Bangladesh using a low-cost, down-well fluid conductivity logging tool to detect leaks in the cased section of wells. The fluid-conductivity tool is designed for the developing world: it is lightweight and easily transportable, operable by one person, and can be built for minimal cost. The fluid-replacement test identifies leaking casing by comparison of fluid conductivity logs collected before and after spiking the wellbore with a sodium chloride tracer. Here, we present results of fluid-replacement logging tests from both leaking and non-leaking casing from wells in Araihazar and Munshiganj, Bangladesh, and demonstrate that the low-cost tool produces measurements comparable to those obtained with a standard geophysical logging tool. Finally, we suggest well testing procedures and approaches for preventing casing leaks in Bangladesh and other developing countries.


Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2008 | 2008

Fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing: A new tool for assessment and monitoring of hydrologic processes

John W. Lane; Frederick D. Day-Lewis; Carole D. Johnson; C.B. Dawson; David L. Nelms; Cheryl A. Eddy-Miller; Jerrod D. Wheeler; Charles F. Harvey; Hanan N. Karam

Fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing (FO DTS) is an emerging technology for characterizing and monitoring a wide range of important earth processes. FO DTS utilizes laser light to measure temperature along the entire length of standard telecommunications optical fibers. The technology can measure temperature every meter over FO cables up to 30 kilometers (km) long. Commercially available systems can measure fiber temperature as often as 4 times per minute, with thermal precision ranging from 0.1 to 0.01 °C depending on measurement integration time. In 2006, the U.S. Geological Survey initiated a project to demonstrate and evaluate DTS as a technology to support hydrologic studies. This paper demonstrates the potential of the technology to assess and monitor hydrologic processes through case-study examples of FO DTS monitoring of streamaquifer interaction on the Shenandoah River near Locke’s Mill, Virginia, and on Fish Creek, near Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and estuary-aquifer interaction on Waquoit Bay, Falmouth, Massachusetts. The ability to continuously observe temperature over large spatial scales with high spatial and temporal resolution provides a new opportunity to observe and monitor a wide range of hydrologic processes with application to other disciplines including hazards, climate-change, and ecosystem monitoring.


Seg Technical Program Expanded Abstracts | 2009

Near‐surface evaluation of Ball Mountain Dam, Vermont, using multi‐channel analysis of surface waves (MASW) and refraction tomography seismic methods on land‐streamer data

Julian Ivanov; Carole D. Johnson; John W. Lane; Richard D. Miller; Drew Clemens

A limited seismic investigation of Ball Mountain Dam, an earthen dam near Jamaica, Vermont, was conducted using multiple seismic methods including multi-channel analysis of surface waves (MASW), refraction tomography, and vertical seismic profiling (VSP). The refraction and MASW data were efficiently collected in one survey using a towed land streamer containing vertical-displacement geophones and two seismic sources, a 9-kg hammer at the beginning of the spread and a 40-kg accelerated weight drop one spread length from the geophones, to obtain nearand far-offset data sets. The quality of the seismic data for the purposes of both refraction and MASW analyses was good for near offsets, decreasing in quality at farther offsets, thus limiting the depth of investigation to about 12 m. Refraction tomography and MASW analyses provided 2D compressional (Vp) and shearwave (Vs) velocity sections along the dam crest and access road, which are consistent with the corresponding VSP seismic velocity estimates from nearby wells. The velocity sections helped identify zonal variations in both Vp and Vs (rigidity) properties, indicative of material heterogeneity or dynamic processes (e.g. differential settlement) at specific areas of the dam. The results indicate that refraction tomography and MASW methods are tools with significant potential for economical, non-invasive characterization of construction materials at earthen dam sites.

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John W. Lane

United States Geological Survey

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Frederick D. Day-Lewis

United States Geological Survey

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Eric A. White

United States Geological Survey

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John H. Williams

United States Geological Survey

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Pierre J. Lacombe

United States Geological Survey

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Allen M. Shapiro

United States Geological Survey

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