[meteorite-list] Ground penetrating radar at Carancas?

Michael Farmer meteoriteguy at yahoo.com
Sat Oct 6 12:10:17 EDT 2007


so you can write this idea off, the water table at
Carancas is halfway up the crater, and the meteorite
should be several meters below it.
The rains will begin in a few weeks, and the water
table will spill over the top of the crater,
unstoppable and the tourist attraction will cease to
exist. I tried to explain that to the Peruvian
officials with nothing more than almost going to
prison as a result. The meteorite community and
scientists will watch this debacle in slwo motion, the
loss of one of the most important meteorite falls in
decades. 
Michael Farmer
--- Arizona Keith <arizonakeith at cox.net> wrote:

> Hello Piper and List
> 
> I used GPR before, and yes it has limitations.
> 
> 1.     It can't see past the water table, blocks the
> signal, or reflex 
> signal completely, and you see nothing past it.
> 2     Wet and dry clay soils weaken and/or block the
> signal completely, you 
> send out a signal and it doesn't come back.
> 3.     Depending on the frequency, Units can see
> small objects close to the 
> surface, deeper you go, the large frequency you
> need, and only large items 
> can be seen at great depths, the unit I used range
> between 1 to 45 foot 
> depths, It's seen 3' dia. manhole covers buried 25'
> deep, but not 8" valve 
> covers at that depth.
> 4.     Metal objects vibrate, they stand out great,
> stony meteorites don't 
> stand out well, I tested it on some, But you can see
> the changes in the 
> layer of bedding, the bedrock and the disturbance of
> the impact on them,
> 
> 5.    Most GPR units only work looking straight
> down, so the area needs to 
> be flat and level for best results.
> 
> Hope this helps, good night all.
> 
> Thanks for your time
> Keith
> Chandler AZ
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Piper R.W. Hollier" <piper at xs4all.nl>
> To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
> Sent: Friday, October 05, 2007 11:30 PM
> Subject: [meteorite-list] Ground penetrating radar
> at Carancas?
> 
> 
> > Hello again list,
> >
> > Ground penetrating radar (GPR) is commonly used
> for non-destructive 
> > investigation of archaeological sites. GPR "can
> detect objects, changes in 
> > material, and voids and cracks." (Wikipedia) Has
> anyone thought of mapping 
> > the crater with GPR before sending in a backhoe to
> rip it open? This could 
> > be one way to have some idea whether there are
> meteorite masses under the 
> > ground, how large, and where, before starting to
> dig. It could also yield 
> > valuable information about the morphology of the
> crater, with potentially 
> > more precision and detail than digging would
> allow.
> >
> > Can someone on the list comment on the state of
> the art of GPR? How deep 
> > can it penetrate nowadays? (Wikipedia says 15
> meters, best case.) Would a 
> > high water table be a problem? (Wikipedia says
> that range would be greatly 
> > reduced in "moist and/or clay laden soils.") Are
> there new designs or 
> > techniques that could get around such limitations?
> >
> > In any case, there would be some thorny practical
> problems to be dealt 
> > with. Ordinarily the antennas need to be nearly in
> direct contact with the 
> > ground, which would seemingly make it very
> difficult, if not impossible, 
> > to do a scan of an area where the ground surface
> is anything but flat. Or 
> > has someone come up with a "workaround" for this
> issue in a similar 
> > situation?
> >
> > Best wishes to all,
> >
> > Piper
> >
> > ______________________________________________
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> >
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> 
> 
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