Ragnor
Sr. Member
- Dec 7, 2015
- 445
- 422
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Ive been wondering if there is a quick and dirty way of doing sub surface scans that might detect fissures and gravel layers on bedrock. River gravels under alluvium. That sort of thing. Not sure if it can be done cheaply or what the best methods are. I mean is it as simple as a laptop connected to a sound board with some sensors? Just some mics and a pulse generator? Kinetic or electronic? It seams like in this day and age computing power is not really a problem. So how to generate a suitable signal for sub terrain mapping. That's the only issue right?
My brother is a programmer and I have no problem with technology. I'm just kind of wondering what direction i should go with it.
Parameters are kind of multiple things. One would be river channel and old river channel mapping for low spots. These could be buried river channels of significant depths. Another situation I would like to address detection of is buried gravels on high benches. Detecting gravels vs land slide cobbles (Qal). The 3rd situation is chunks of metal sitting on bedrock covered by a foot or 3 of pumice and dirt. They are a bit too deep for a standard metal detector and I would like to be able to search perhaps a 50' diameter circle in one setting. Like detecting small pockets of high conductivity.
It's just radio frequency right? It can't be that hard to build an emitter and receiver set up?
I guess I'm asking has this stuff already been done and can I replicate it cheaply?
So there yah have it. Fire away.
My brother is a programmer and I have no problem with technology. I'm just kind of wondering what direction i should go with it.
Parameters are kind of multiple things. One would be river channel and old river channel mapping for low spots. These could be buried river channels of significant depths. Another situation I would like to address detection of is buried gravels on high benches. Detecting gravels vs land slide cobbles (Qal). The 3rd situation is chunks of metal sitting on bedrock covered by a foot or 3 of pumice and dirt. They are a bit too deep for a standard metal detector and I would like to be able to search perhaps a 50' diameter circle in one setting. Like detecting small pockets of high conductivity.
It's just radio frequency right? It can't be that hard to build an emitter and receiver set up?
I guess I'm asking has this stuff already been done and can I replicate it cheaply?
So there yah have it. Fire away.