“…The record of these electrical fields provides a powerful geophysical method for tracking the pattern of groundwater flow. Applications in geohydrology concern the forced movement of water associated with deformation of porous rocks [e.g., Lorne et al , 1999a, 1999b; Revil et al , 2003], the determination of preferential flow paths over karstic areas [ Jardani et al , 2006a, 2006b], the determination of transmissive properties of unconfined aquifers [ Titov et al , 2000], the determination of subglacial flow patterns [ Kulessa et al , 2003a, 2003b], CO 2 sequestration [ Moore et al , 2004], and the detection of leakages in embankments and dams and the interpretation of the resulting self‐potential signals in terms of seepage velocity [e.g., Bogoslovsky and Ogilvy , 1970; Gex , 1980; Panthulu et al , 2001; Sheffer , 2002; Sheffer and Howie , 2001, 2003; Titov et al , 2005; Rozycki et al , 2006]. These works have also recently driven the development of new algorithms of self‐potential tomography [e.g., Revil et al , 2001; Long and Hao , 2005; Minsley et al , 2007] and tank‐scale laboratory measurements in well‐controlled conditions to check the underlying physics of these processes [ Maineult et al , 2006a, 2006b; Moore and Glaser , 2007].…”