I think I can shine a little light on the so called Delta Ground. It has some other names like Triad and Crows Foot. It stems from terminating lightning protection systems down conductors to earth in a fashion that reduces the inductive properties of the ground rods.
First consider a single ground rod in soil. When lightning strikes are delivered to a ground rod, the rod will be surface charged to a calculable velocity factor. Expressed as E = L di/dt where di is the lightning strike peak current, and dt is the rise time.
There is a limitation created by a length of a single ground rod as it penetrates it way through the relatively high resistance near the surface area of the ground rod and works to lower resistance to more conductive soil at the lower depths of the rod. So in effect this inductance of the top portion of the rod in higher resistance and CHOKES OFF current flow to the more conductive soil deeper down along the lower depths of the rod. This produces a large voltage drop along the more inductive top portion of the rod. When this occurs there will be saturation and local ground potential rise due to this breakdown.
So one solution is to use more than 1 ground rod and add parallel circuits to reduce the inductance. One such method is a Triad, (aka Delta or Crows Foot)