“…Changes in electrical resistivity correlate with variation in solid material (minerals and rocks), water saturation, fluid conductivity and porosity, which may be used to map stratigraphic units, geological structure, fractures, groundwater and anthropogenic structures. ERT has been successfully used to identify and map low‐resistivity volumes such as fine‐grained archaeological deposits (Abu Zeid et al ., 2019; Becker et al ., 2019), as well as typically high‐resistivity structures, including bedrock, wall pipes, roads (Tsokas et al ., 2009), foundations (Drahor et al ., 2008), ditches, palaeochannels, internal structures in mounds and barrows (Astin et al ., 2007; Papadopoulos et al ., 2010), buried chambers and cavities (Cardarelli et al ., 2006; Deiana et al ., 2018), caves, karst features, sinkholes and cavities (e.g. Smith, 1986; Maillol et al ., 1999; Van Schoor, 2002; Al‐Zoubi et al ., 2007; Ortega et al ., 2010; Zhu et al ., 2011; Carrière et al ., 2013; Satitpittakul et al ., 2013; Rainone et al ., 2015; Torrese, 2020; Torrese et al ., 2021a), and offshore archaeological features (Sarris et al ., 2014; Tonkov, 2014; Simyrdanis et al ., 2015).…”