Geophysical Surveys – Electrical Resistivity (VES) for Groundwater Exploration in Kenya

Vertical Electrical Sounding (VES) has become the most widely used geophysical method for groundwater exploration across Kenya, from the coastal sandstones to the Rift Valley’s volcanic terrain. This non-invasive technique provides critical data about subsurface layering and aquifer potential at a fraction of drilling costs.

This article examines:

  • Fundamental principles of resistivity surveying

  • Field procedures adapted to Kenyan conditions

  • Interpretation techniques for different geological settings

  • Cost analysis compared to other methods

  • Success rates in various Kenyan regions

Scientific Principles

How Resistivity Works

  1. Current Injection: Two electrodes send electrical current into the ground

  2. Potential Measurement: Two other electrodes measure the voltage difference

  3. Resistivity Calculation: ρ = 2πa(ΔV/I) where:

    • ρ = apparent resistivity (Ωm)

    • a = electrode spacing (m)

    • ΔV = potential difference (V)

    • I = current (A)

Interpretation Guide for Kenyan Geology

Resistivity Range (Ωm) Likely Material Aquifer Potential
1-10 Clay Poor
10-50 Weathered bedrock Moderate
50-300 Saturated sand/gravel Excellent
>500 Massive bedrock None

Field Methodology

Equipment Used in Kenya

  1. ABEM Terrameter (Most common)

    (VES)
    (VES)
  2. SuperSting R8 (Advanced systems)

  3. DIY Resistivity Meters (Local university projects)

Standard Survey Procedure

  1. Electrode Configuration:

    • Schlumberger array (most common)

    • Wenner array (for detailed surveys)

  2. Spacing Protocol:

    • Initial spacing: 1-2m

    • Maximum spacing: 100-300m (depending on target depth)

  3. Data Collection:

    • Minimum 10-15 soundings per site

    • Measurements in 2-4 directions

Case Study: Makueni County

A 2022 WRA project:

  • Conducted 48 VES surveys

  • Identified 12 high-potential sites

  • Achieved 92% drilling success rate

  • Cost savings: 60% compared to exploratory drilling

Cost Analysis

Component Cost (KES)
Equipment rental (per day) 15,000-25,000
Field team (3 people/day) 8,000-12,000
Data interpretation 5,000-10,000 per site
Total per site 28,000-47,000

Advantages in the Kenyan Context

  1. Portability – Equipment can reach remote areas

  2. Adaptability – Works in most geological settings

  3. Cost-Effectiveness – 1/5th the cost of test drilling

Limitations & Solutions

Challenge Solution
Urban interference Night surveys
Dry surface conditions Wetting electrodes
Complex geology Combine with TEM

Emerging Technologies

  1. 2D/3D Resistivity Imaging – For complex aquifers

  2. Automated Interpretation – AI-assisted analysis

  3. Hybrid Systems – Resistivity+IP for better discrimination

Conclusion

VES remains Kenya’s most reliable and affordable geophysical method for groundwater exploration. When properly conducted and interpreted, it can achieve success rates exceeding 85% in favorable geological settings.

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