Understanding the hydrogeological processes is critical for a sound management
of groundwater resources in costal areas. Here lie majority of human settlements, industrial production,
and fish farming. Human pressure on the coastland environment is constantly increasing, and
many studies predict a rising of seawater level in the next 50 years raging from few cm up to several
tens of cm, with expected threatening consequences (e.g., Carbognin et al., 2009). If these are
common characteristics of most costal areas, wetlands, lagoons and estuaries also have often unique
flora and fauna depending on the groundwater-surface water processes. The hydrologic setting of
the transitional environments is complicated by their Late Quaternary subsoil architecture. The
deposits represents the transition through the fluvial in tide-dominated depositional systems triggered
by the sea level changes. In particular, in the Venice area numerous geomorphological features
representing i.e. fluvial paleoriver beds, ancient tidal channels, and paleobeach ridges occur
(Tosi et al., 2009). These features are generally filled by sandy deposits and can be considered preferential
path for the groundwater flow, both in the horizontal and vertical directions.
In order to have a better understanding of the hydrogeological setting of these areas, and also to
produce more useful models, it is crucial to acquire information both inland and within the lagoon
or wetland, covering both its permanent wet and tidal areas. Acquiring information that can be used
to model the groundwater processes of these areas is often logistically challenging and therefore
expensive and slow. This applies both to punctual, invasive and direct measurements such as depth
to groundwater table and salinity from boreholes, to non invasive, area covering, indirect data such
as resistivity or seismic investigations. Apart from the logistics, in many cases the quality of the data
reflects the spatial and or temporal alternation of dry land and ponds-marshes-surface water in general.
Airborne electromagnetics (AEM) can greatly improve the data quality and coverage in such
areas, while cutting significantly the acquisition costs. Its direct output is geoelectrical cross sections
or maps that are then used as input for hydrogeological models. The application of AEM for
groundwater monitoring and modeling has been steadily rising in the past decade, due to parallel
developments of better AEM systems and processing, e.g. inversion methodologies. However, so
far there have been extremely limited attempts of applying AEM to areas such as lagoons, wetlands,
rivers or bays. This manuscript shows that AEM can produce quantitative results useful for groundwater
modeling also in these areas, presenting the results of a survey carried out in the central and
southern sectors of the Venice Lagoon, Italy, by the SkyTEM system.
We present some of the inversion outcome as horizontal average resistivity maps at different
depth intervals and cross sections obtained by SkyTEM application in the two areas where different
hydrogeological processes are under investigation.PublishedTrieste, Italy6A. Monitoraggio ambientale, sicurezza e territorioope