MO
Montreal
Montreal, Canada

Seismic Tomography (Refraction/Reflection) in Montreal

Beneath Montreal lies a complex arrangement of Paleozoic sedimentary rocks, notably the Trenton limestone, Utica shale, and Chazy dolostone, all overlain by Champlain Sea clays, glacial till, and intermittent sand lenses that can surpass 40 meters in thickness east of the downtown area. Determining a reliable depth-to-bedrock map via drilling alone is challenging in this setting, as conventional refusal counts often misinterpret the contact between stiff till and weathered shale. Seismic tomography circumvents this problem by directly imaging velocity contrasts, yielding a continuous cross-section instead of scattered borehole data. In the Montreal census metropolitan area, our acquisition parameters align with the NBCC 2020 site classification framework, where Vs30 is merely the starting point when distinguishing competent limestone from fractured shale with a 20-meter transition zone. This technique also reveals buried paleochannels capable of diverting groundwater toward deep excavations in neighborhoods like Ville-Marie or Griffintown.

Refusal in till is not bedrock—seismic tomography shows the velocity gradient, and the reflection stack finds the real impedance contrast beneath it.

Service characteristics in Montreal

A recent 14-story residential project near the Lachine Canal illustrates the value of paired refraction and reflection tomography. The geotechnical boreholes showed refusal at 12–16 meters, but three separate rigs gave three different refusal depths within a 30-meter radius. We deployed a 48-channel spread with a 5-meter geophone spacing and a weight-drop source, then processed both first-arrival traveltimes and reflected phases. The refraction model showed a gradual velocity ramp from 800 m/s in dry clay to 2,100 m/s in dense till, while the reflection stack picked a clear impedance contrast at 19 meters—the true limestone surface. Without that data, the shoring design would have anchored into till assuming it was rock, a mistake that would have surfaced during excavation. When the site overlies Utica shale, combining seismic tomography with slope stability analysis becomes critical because the shale's anisotropy controls bench-cut behavior. For deeper infrastructure, we sometimes pair the survey with deep excavations instrumentation to correlate pre-construction velocity models with actual lateral movements during the dig.
Seismic Tomography (Refraction/Reflection) in Montreal
Seismic Tomography (Refraction/Reflection) in Montreal
ParameterTypical value
Source type (refraction)Weight drop, sledgehammer, or accelerated drop (6–12 kg); explosive for depths >60 m
Receiver array24–72 vertical geophones (4.5 Hz or 10 Hz), typical spacing 2–10 m depending on target depth
Maximum imaging depth50–100 m (refraction); 150–400 m (reflection) depending on source energy and spread length
Velocity range interpreted200–800 m/s (loose fill/peat), 800–2,000 m/s (clay/till), 2,000–4,500 m/s (limestone/shale), >4,500 m/s (competent dolostone)
Tomographic inversion schemeNon-linear traveltime tomography (SimulPS or equivalent); pre-stack depth migration for reflection sections
Output deliverables2D velocity cross-sections, depth-to-bedrock contours, Vs30 maps, reflection time/depth sections, SEG-Y raw data
Compliance referenceASTM D5777-18 (seismic refraction), NBCC 2020 Site Class A–E, CSA A23.3-19 for foundations on rock

Critical ground factors in Montreal

It is common in Montreal for geotechnical reports to assign a Site Class C or D based on a single Vs30 measurement, yet shear-wave velocity profiles from seismic tomography often show a velocity inversion—a stiff surface crust over softer clay—that markedly shifts the site period. This becomes critical for mid-rise buildings in Hochelaga-Maisonneuve or Rosemont, where the building's fundamental frequency may coincide with the site period derived from the full velocity model. Another frequent issue is confusing a line of boulders in the till with bedrock; refraction tomography alone can be inconclusive, but adding a reflection survey identifies the continuous reflector beneath the boulders. Neglecting these subtleties results in either excessive excavation costs or insufficient seismic design. The Champlain Sea clay also has a pronounced weathering crust that artificially elevates apparent velocities in the top 3–5 meters, and only an inversion that accounts for vertical velocity gradients can correct this bias in the Vs30 calculation.

Need a geotechnical assessment?

Reply within 24h.

Applicable standards: ASTM D5777-18 — Standard Guide for Using the Seismic Refraction Method, NBCC 2020 — National Building Code of Canada, Part 4, Site Classification (Table 4.1.8.4.A), CSA A23.3-19 — Design of Concrete Structures: foundations on rock, ASTM D7128-18 — Standard Guide for Using the Seismic-Reflection Method for Shallow Subsurface Investigation

Our services


Our operations in Montreal encompass the entire seismic tomography process, from survey planning to final velocity models that are integrated with the geotechnical baseline report. Below, we outline the three primary service packages.

Refraction tomography for bedrock mapping

This package focuses on depth-to-bedrock mapping and rippability evaluation. We utilize arrays spanning up to 120 meters with 24–48 channels, processing first arrivals via non-linear inversion to capture lateral velocity gradients typical of Montreal's till-over-shale sequence. Deliverables comprise 2D velocity sections and a bedrock surface contour map referenced to site coordinates.

High-resolution reflection profiling

Refraction tomography falls short when a high-velocity cap impedes penetration or when sub-bedrock features such as faults, karst cavities in the Beekmantown dolostone, or fracture zones in the Utica shale are of interest. We employ a hammer or weight-drop source with a 48–72 channel array, applying pre-stack depth migration to generate a true-depth section with sub-meter vertical resolution.

Combined refraction + reflection with Vs30 profiling

Designed for NBCC site classification, this standard package involves both P-wave and S-wave refraction (using horizontal geophones and a shear source) to invert for Vs30. A reflection component adds a confirming bedrock reflector. The output includes a formatted site-class letter suitable for the structural engineer of record.

Top questions

What depth of investigation can seismic tomography reach in Montreal's glacial deposits?

With a 120-meter spread and a weight-drop source, refraction tomography typically achieves depths of 50–100 meters, while reflection profiling can reach 300 meters or more. The feasible limit depends on the velocity contrast at the target interface and the attenuating properties of the Champlain Sea clay, which tends to absorb frequencies above 80 Hz.

Can seismic tomography distinguish between dense till and weathered bedrock?

Indeed, this is where the method proves most valuable in Montreal. Refraction tomography reveals the velocity gradient within the till—generally 1,400–2,100 m/s—while the reflection stack captures the sharp impedance contrast at the till-bedrock interface, appearing as a distinct reflector at depth. Combining both removes the ambiguity that often misleads refusal-based borehole logs.

How much does a seismic tomography survey cost in Montreal?

For a combined refraction and reflection survey in the Montreal region, budgets typically fall between CA$3,650 and CA$6,350, depending on line length, number of spreads, source type, and whether Vs30 profiling is included. A site-specific estimate is provided after considering the project location and target depth requirements.

What surface conditions limit seismic tomography in Montreal?

Asphalt and concrete surfaces couple well with geophones using plaster or wax; loose gravel or snow cover requires burial of the sensors. The main limitation in Montreal's dense urban neighborhoods is ambient noise from traffic and LRT lines—we mitigate this with vertical stacking and by scheduling acquisition during low-noise windows, typically early morning or late evening. More info.

Coverage in Montreal