This thesis examines the use of electrical resistivity surveys and ground-penetrating radar to characterize groundwater-surface water interaction at Mirror Lake, New Hampshire. Resistivity surveys using both surface-towed and stationary cables identified geological heterogeneities controlling seepage. Intermediate resistivity values of around 1500 ohm-meters correlated with the highest measured seepage rates. Low resistivity values below 200 ohm-meters indicated organic matter deposits with low seepage. High resistivity values over 3000 ohm-meters represented poorly-sorted till with low seepage. Resistivity also imaged a plume of road salt contamination. Ground-penetrating radar identified an organic matter blanket at the lake bottom and confirmed