TEM2Go
The Near Surface Observatory at the Bureau of Economic Geology has acquired a new geophysical instrument capable of acquiring profiles of the electrical conductivity of the ground from the surface to depths of 50 m or more. This instrument, called "TEM2Go" by TEMCompany, acquires data using the transient or time-domain electromagnetic induction method (TEM or TDEM), is carried across the landscape by two people with backpacks (fig. 1), is controlled by an app running on a smartphone or tablet, and displays inverted depth sections in real time. Researchers at the NSO have long used airborne and ground-based TEM methods to support geologic mapping, groundwater, and soil and water salinization studies, but this is the first TEM instrument at the NSO capable of rapidly acquiring electrical conductivity cross sections over walkable terrain. This instrument, one of the first of its kind worldwide, is already being used to support STATEMAP geologic mapping in Texas and a TWDB-sponsored study of the Brazos River Alluvium Aquifer near College Station, Texas. Similar instruments are begining to be used to locate critical groundwater resources in areas suffering humanitarian crises owing to lack of potable water.


Drone view of TEM2Go in operation at Commons Ford Ranch Metropolitan Park, Austin, Texas. Video by John Andrews.