The City of Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada operates a water well field adjacent to the Saint John River. Water is extracted from a semi-confined aquifer that consists of a buried sand and gravel esker ridge discontinuously covered by a clay∕silt aquitard. Geological, hydrogeochemical, and hydraulic data have long pointed to infiltration of river water as the main source of aquifer recharge but the shape and size of the recharge zone has, until recently, remained speculative. A combination of three geophysical surveys, including resistivity imaging along the shoreline, and seismic and electromagnetic profiling on the river itself, have now revealed the complex outline of the area beneath the river where the infiltration likely occurs. Broadband seismic reflections, with dominant frequencies of [Formula: see text] were recorded from depths as great as [Formula: see text] using a boomer source and 1KB Seistec line-in-cone receiver well suited to operation in the shallow water environment. EM31 and EM34 terrain conductivity meters, deployed in an outboard-motor-powered canoe and raft, revealed the subsurface conductivity structure in the same depth range. While the seismic method imaged the clay aquitard stratigraphy including its termination against the esker ridge, the electromagnetic method provided a more complete plan view of the extent of the clay window recharge zone. The two riverine data sets are highly complementary; as a start towards joint interpretation, we introduce the concept of bathymetry-corrected apparent conductivity and show how it helps to sharpen the boundary of the inferred recharge area. Confirmation of the geophysical interpretation is provided by the presence or absence of aquitard material in boreholes that have recently been drilled from a barge on the river.
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