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Apparent electric conductivity (ECa) is considered as an easy measurable parameter which is potentially able to detect inhomogeneities in the field which can, in turn, be used to select specific locations for subsequent investigations regarding the compaction state of the soil.
An easy-to-apply method which measures the apparent electrical conductivity (ECa) of soil is performed with the EM38 probe (Geonics, Canada). Subsoil compaction was assessed by the penetration resistance (PR) (Penetrologger, Eijkelkamp, the Netherlands) from the soil surface down to 0.8 m soil depth with a vertical resolution of 0.01 m. The fields under study are located south of Hannover, in the northwest of Germany. We measured at approximately 10,000 locations the apparent electrical conductivity and at 5,000 locations the penetration resistance. Measurements were taken in April 2005 up to April 2007. Further, we used at one site a Ground Penetrating Radar to add detailled information of soil discontinuities on a small scale.
In general we found a strong correlation between the values of the Penetrologger and the signal of the EM38, especially in the area with high values of penetrations resistance. The additional results from the Ground Penetrating Radar back the results from the PR measurement and partly the spatial variety of the ECa results. This leads us to the conclusion that the geophysical based EM38 technique could be a detector for the regionalization of subsoil compaction in soils consisting of homogeneous material