Date of Award
2017-01-01
Degree Name
Master of Science
Department
Physics
Advisor(s)
Jorge A. López Gallardo
Abstract
This Thesis presents the results of an investigation of the concentration of radon in soil around a fault in the East Franklin Mountains in the El Paso area in West Texas. The connection between underground radon exhalations near active faults has been known for decades, but possible similar increases of underground radon levels around inactive faults have not been studied as thoroughly. Arguing that the dilatancy-diffusion model used to explain the phenomenon near active faults does not apply to the case of inactive faults, a hypoThesis is formulated under which increased levels of underground radon must be present near inactive faults. To test the hypoThesis a series of measurements of underground radon gas were performed around a fault in the Franklin Mountain of El Paso, Texas. The measurements found that the in-soil production of radon is indeed correlated to the existence of a fault even if it has not had any recorded activity in recent geological times. This finding seems to indicate that in non-active faults the radon production is due mainly to the radioactivity of the top soil and to the transport properties of the medium, and not to deeper seismic activity. These results open the possibility of using in-soil radon gas concentrations as an examination tool of dormant faults in inhabited areas where no other fault-detecting methods can be used.
Language
en
Provenance
Received from ProQuest
Copyright Date
2017-08
File Size
55 pages
File Format
application/pdf
Rights Holder
Germán Rodríguez Ortiz
Recommended Citation
Rodríguez Ortiz, Germán, "Using Underground Radon To Detect Inactive Geological Faults" (2017). Open Access Theses & Dissertations. 542.
https://scholarworks.utep.edu/open_etd/542