A Controlled Urban Geophysics Test Site for Near-Surface Target Detection and Simulated Shallow Leak Assessment
Luciano Galone, Sebastiano D’Amico, Emanuele Colica, Chiara Torre, Malik Adam, Lluís RiveroThis study presents a compact controlled urban geophysics test site developed at the University of Malta to evaluate the response of complementary near-surface sensing methods under known shallow subsurface conditions. The experimental setup is designed to investigate buried target detection and the response to a simulated shallow leak, used here as a controlled water-release experiment in a shallow carbonate setting characterized by thin, laterally variable soil cover and anthropogenic disturbance. A preliminary passive seismic survey based on the horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVSR) method was used to compare candidate sectors and select the most suitable area for installation. The test site includes a buried iron plate and a perforated PVC pipe, the latter used to release water under controlled shallow conditions. Ground-penetrating radar (GPR), smartphone magnetometry, electrical resistivity tomography (ERT), and UAV-based thermal imaging were applied to assess target detectability and leak-related surface–subsurface responses. Results show that GPR provides the clearest response for static target detection, while smartphone magnetometry identifies the buried ferrous target under favourable conditions. For the simulated leak experiment, ERT provides the most robust subsurface evidence of moisture redistribution after water injection. UAV thermal imaging captures a complementary surface thermal response influenced by both moisture dynamics and local surface disturbance. The results show that a compact controlled test site can support the comparison of professional and low-cost sensing methods for shallow target detection and simulated leak assessment. In this configuration, the controlled water-release experiment provides a practical basis for evaluating leak-related surface–subsurface responses under known shallow conditions. The proposed setup has implications for methodological assessment, training, and near-surface environmental monitoring in heterogeneous urban settings.