About this Research Topic
This Research Topic is dedicated to the most recent and innovative applications of near-surface geophysical methods to: (i) characterize the deep critical zone architecture, (ii) monitor the dynamic critical zone processes within the hydro-, bio- and geochemical cycles. We welcome novel methodologies taking advantage of standard or more advanced geophysical techniques, and applied across multiple scales ranging from laboratory to regional-scale studies, at single sites or along different gradients (geological, climatic etc.). We also seek contributions focusing on joint interpretation/inversion of different datasets in order to address the non-unicity of CZ imaging, and particularly welcome the application of petrophysical relationships to link laboratory and field-scale measurements. Studies using geophysics to inform relevant hydrological structures, track water flow paths and associated travel times, highlight geochemical reactive fronts and hotspots, and monitor biologically mediated processes are especially targeted. We therefore encourage more holistic, cross-disciplinary studies combining near-surface geophysics with other CZ-focused disciplines (e.g. geochemistry, hydrology, geomorphology, biology etc.).
We welcome submissions focusing on, but not limited to, the following themes:
• Critical zone
• Near-surface geophysics
• Petrophysics
• Weathering
• Water-rock interaction
• Regolith
• Subsurface water flow and storage dynamics
The following article types are available: Original Research, Mini Review, Opinion, Review, Technology
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.