Remote Sensing in Geology. Highlights of Lesson 9 Criteria: Geomorphological Tone & color Vegetation Derived criteria Surveying Geology: Structures: −

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Oil and Gas Deposits Fossil Fuels: Reference: Pages
Advertisements

Natural Resources Renewable
Unit 3 Rocks, Soil, Erosion and Mass Movements
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEM (GIS) AND REMOTE SENSING Lecture 4 Zakaria Khamis.
Chapter 1 Minerals: Building Blocks of Rocks. Minerals: Building Blocks of Rocks By definition a mineral is/has Naturally occurring Inorganic solid Ordered.
Metamorphic Rocks.
Visualizing Physical Geography Copyright © 2008 John Wiley and Sons Publishers Inc. Chapter 8 Earth Materials and Plate Tectonics.
Sedimentary Rocks.
The Lithosphere.
Sedimentary Petrology GEO 333
Classification based upon formation
Rocks 3.1 The Rock Cycle  Rocks are any solid mass of minerals, or mineral-like matter, occurring naturally as part of our planet.  Types of Rocks 1.
Earth's Crust and its Composition The elements of the Earth's crust occur in chemical compounds that we recognize as minerals. Minerals are combined into.
Chapter 5 and 6 Rocks.
Lithology, Structure, Geomorphology. Brandenberg Massif, Namibia Granitic intrusion in desert.
Hydrothermal minerals
ASTER image – one of the fastest changing places in the U.S. Where??
Metamorphism and Metamorphic Rocks
Sedimentary Rocks. Basic Geologic Principles Principle of Superposition: Younger sedimentary and volcanic rocks are deposited on top of older rocks. Principle.
MMPE 290 Introduction to Mining & Mineral Process Engineering Mining Geology and Exploration.
Instruction: View full-screen images in the Slide Show mode of display. Read the explanatory notes in the Normal View mode of display.
Mineral Exploration Using Modern Remote Sensing Techniques by John L. Berry John Berry Assocs Beverly Hills Dr. AUSTIN, TX
APPLICATION OF REMOTE SENSING ON
THE ROCK CYCLE. Did you know… True or False? –the elements that make up rocks are never created or destroyed –Rocks can’t transform into other rocks –The.
Types of Chemical Weathering. Carbonation Carbonation- the reaction between calcite and weak acids in rain water and acids in groundwater. Rocks that.
Mineral Deposits 1 - Introduction I.G.Kenyon. Mineral Deposits – Basic Terminology 1 Mineral – something that can be mined from the ground and is of economic/industrial.
Minerals.
Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Earth Systems 3209 Unit: 5 Earth’s Resources Reference: Chapters 21; Appendix.
Section 1: Mineral Resources
What is a Mineral?. What is a mineral?  Elements which can be described in chemical terms or compounds composed of two or more elements and found occurring.
Remote Sensing for Mineral Exploration
MINERALS!. Earth’s Geosphere Densest part of planet’s materials; solid at surface temperatures; includes rocks and minerals Accounts for ___% of Earth’s.
Energy and Mineral Resources
Mineral Exploration Tel: (07) Fax: (07)
EARTH SCIENCE Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Tarbuck Lutgens 
Reese MINERALS. How do they form Minerals form when molten materials cools and hardens inside the Earth or on the surface. Sometimes minerals from when.
Metal Deposits  The specification states that you should be able to:  a) Explain the low crustal abundances of metallic minerals; show an understanding.
Rubin Pajoohan Fartak International Engineering co.
Mining. Mining Minerals are naturally occurring substances found in rocks, soils, or sediments. Minerals deposits that can be mined profitably are called.
Support the spread of “good practice” in generating, managing, analysing and communicating spatial information Introduction to Remote Sensing Images By:
Warm- Up Take a seat and update your table of contents. Take a copy of Test 2 Most Missed and begin answering the questions. TOC: 46. Test 2 Most Missed.
What is an image? What is an image and which image bands are “best” for visual interpretation?
EARTH MATERIALS EQ:What materials compose the Earth? CLASSROOM UNSQUARED.
Rock & Fluid Properties
Mining and Mineral Resources
Geology Review.
G P Non-Conforming Sands Type -4 Type -5 Negative 0 Positive Type -3
The material met all the criteria required to be called a mineral.
An ever changing Earth Rock Cycle Magma A body of molten rock found at depth. (2000 °F)
Porphyry Style Deposits Porphyry Copper & Copper- Molybdenum Porphyry Molybdenum Porphyry Tin Porphyry Gold.
Energy and Mineral Resources
Metamorphic Rocks Section 6.3. Recognizing Metamorphic Rocks Metamorphosed means “changed” Metamorphosed means “changed” High temperature and pressure.
Chapter 7 Resources and energy
Minerals. Matter  Matter is anything that has volume and mass Solid- definite shape and volume Liquid- only definite volume Gas- neither definite shape.
Characteristics of VMS Deposits VMS deposits are major sources of Cu and Zn and significant quantities of Au, Ag, Pb, Se, Cd, Bi, Sn as well as minor amounts.
by John C. Mars, and Lawrence C. Rowan
Digital Image Processing and Analysis Techniques for Detection Of Hydrothermal Alteration Zones, Omer M. Ahmed, University of Kerala, India.
Using vegetation indices (NDVI) to study vegetation
Sedimentary Petrology GEO 333
Learning Target = Matter & Minerals
4.1 Energy and Mineral Resources
Sedimentary Rocks Detrital rocks Material is solid particles
MINERALS Reese.
Lecture 9: Spectroscopy
Porphyry style and related Hydrothermal Deposits
Signatures of Geologic Materials in VNIR-SWIR
Porphyry base metal deposits
Mining.
What is a mineral? What is a mineral?
Energy and Mineral Resources
Presentation transcript:

Remote Sensing in Geology

Highlights of Lesson 9 Criteria: Geomorphological Tone & color Vegetation Derived criteria Surveying Geology: Structures: − Rupture elements (beddings, faults, joints) − Plicative elements (anticlines, sinklines) Lithological units Quaternary units

Lesson № 10

Intro: Multispectral approach of satellite born systems proved to be advantageous over aerial photo interpretations even coarser in resolution and limited in stereoscopy. Namely, the structural features appeared more discernable in synoptic view (instead of mosaicing far too many aerial photos), not to mention the benefits of spectral information boost in color composites. The case histories showed immense contributions in exploration of metallic and non-metallic mineralizations, as well as construction material deposits. Non renewable resources (especially hydrocarbons) appeared to be cyclically assessed by RS, based on their actual demands on the market… In turn, the indirect approach was substantially popularized, since it seemed to be easier and more reliable to map rocks and minerals associated with the ore body then the body itself (ore were not find as spectrally unique, even more so, they are rarely exposed and indicated on the surface). Geological applications – Mineral mapping

Metallic deposits Copper (Cu) Gold (Au) Hydrocarbon deposits Geological applications – Mineral mapping

Porphyry copper deposits claim their domination in terms of Cu findings (by volume and purity of the ore). They are emplaced within the active convergent continental margins (subduction zones) and provoked by both crustal and upper mantle magmas. As such they represent vast linear features, affecting and altering the surrounding rocks zonally trough their evolution. A typical cross- section consists of the alteration zones (propylitic, argillic & phyllic), shelled coaxially around the potassic (K) core, where a usual ore shell embraces the contact zone (core vs. phyllic alteration zones with pyrite, molybdenite & chalcopyrite compounds in abundance), whereas oxidized shells (containing ferric oxides) predominantly shift toward the outermost periphery of alteration zone.subduction zones Copper deposits

tuff silificated argillic opalized

Copper deposits vis - swir, nir swir - nir

Copper deposits Quantitative approach brightness/ratio codes: Average the reflectance for TM data records (about 150 mineral/vegetation specimens) Calculate all the ratio image combinations (non-repetitive) Normalize to entire data base Reclassify for 10-grade scale (0 for no reflectance and 9 for maximal) Inversed ratio codes are obtained by subtracting from 9 Alunite – high reflectance in bands 3 & 4, low in 7

Copper deposits

Color Ratio Composite: R = 5/7 G = 5/1 B = 3/4 Clayey minerals are having high red ratio so they are displayed in red Ferric compounds (hematite, goethite, limonite) are displayed green due to high 5/1 ratio code and negligible in red and blue Transitions are represented by yellow and dark colors

Copper deposits tuff silificated low Fe and clay argillic high clay & Fe opalized high clay & low Fe

Especially interesting for disseminated deposits Tracked by some spectrally authentic mineral specimens, such as buddingtonite (in sparsely vegetated terrain) by same principle of ratio CC. Buddingtonite is ammoniated feldspar in hydrothermally altered rocks. It is exhibiting some interesting spectral features around its apsorption line in NIR Gold deposits

Hydrocarbons are represented by natural gas and oil deposits generated by decaying of organic matter. Once they are trapped within some geological structural feature they are accumulated. One way of dealing with the exploration is to track those structural features Another implies delicate multispectral analyses of deposit vs. base rock interplay. Namely, the “trap” requires saturated environment, isolated to a specific level, but some seepage is unavoidable. The molecules of gas are penetrating the barriers trough the micro-fissures or readily developed cracks & joints, upward, pressured by the lithostatics. The gas compounds react with the overlain environment chemically, bleaching the rocks and leaving some significant geochemical imprints, such as uranium ore cells. Hence, it is possible to conduct indirect mapping of the petroleum deposits trough uranium exploration On the other hand uranium exploration could be derived directly (measuring the radioactivity) or again indirectly by tracking the oxidation zone (alike the copper exploration) Hydrocarbone deposits

MSS ratio 5/4 (TM ratio 2/1)

Hydrocarbone deposits CRC (MSS converted to TM) R = 2/1 G = 3/2 B = 4/3 reddish areas are heavily ironed green-blue areas are vegetated water & shades are black

Hydrocarbone deposits FCC R = 2 G = 3 B = 4 vegetation is red

Hydrocarbone deposits Supervised classification by parallelepiped method: Triassic – red Shale – blue Arkose sandstone – black Limestone & Granit - brown