As part of a program to evaluate the utility of integrated geoelectrical methods for subsurface structural mapping and groundwater resource investigation in the semiarid eastern margin of the Parnaiba basin in Brazil, several vertical electrical soundings (VES) and transient electromagnetic (TEM) and tensorial audiomagnetotelluric (AMT) measurements were carried out along a 250-km-long east‐west transect (passing through major towns and cities) and a 127-km-long north‐south profile (passing through small farm settlements). The various data sets have been jointly processed using a novel integration scheme and a constrained 1-D inversion technique to yield the resistivity structure underneath each observation station. Regularized 2-D inversion of static‐shift‐corrected, dual‐mode AMT data provided additional deep structural information and, together with the joint 1-D results, enabled an assessment of the distribution of aquifers and major structural controls in the region. The east‐west regional geoelectrical model evokes a picture of a gently dipping succession of conductive and resistive units in good agreement with the alternating shaly and sandy formations evinced from preexisting borehole data and previous geological studies. The geoelectric models also show the presence of the large‐scale Transbrazilian lineament and other graben‐like structures, previously inferred from aeromagnetic data, which may have some control on groundwater distribution. The agreement with geology and aeromagnetic interpretation emphasizes the importance of integrated geoelectrical surveying as a complementary or independent means of obtaining useful stratigraphic and structural information for hydrogeological studies in this region.
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