The Paradox of Scale: Reconciling magnetic anomalies with rock magnetic properties for cost-effective mineral exploration

2014 ◽  
Vol 104 ◽  
pp. 121-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
James R. Austin ◽  
Clive A. Foss
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Jackisch ◽  
Björn Henning Heincke ◽  
Robert Zimmermann ◽  
Erik Vest Sørensen ◽  
Markku Pirttijärvi ◽  
...  

Abstract. Mineral exploration in the West Greenland flood basalt province is attractive because of its resemblance to the magmatic sulphide-rich deposit in the Russian Norilsk region, but it is challenged by rugged topography and partly poor exposure for relevant geologic formations. On northern Disko Island, previous exploration efforts have identified rare native iron occurrences and a high potential for Ni-Cu-Co-PGE-Au mineralization. However, Quaternary landslide activity has obliterated rock exposure at many places at lower elevations. To augment prospecting field work under these challenging conditions, we acquire high-resolution magnetic and optical remote sensing data using drones in the Qullissat area. From the data, we generate a detailed 3D model of a mineralized basalt unit, belonging to the Asuk Member (Mb) of the Palaeocene Vaigat formation. A wide range of legacy data and newly acquired geo- and petrophysical, as well as geochemical-mineralogical measurements form the basis of an integrated geological interpretation of the unoccupied aerial system (UAS) surveys. In this context, magnetic data aims to define the location and the shape of the buried magmatic body, and to estimate if its magnetic properties are indicative for mineralization. High-resolution UAS-based multispectral orthomosaics are used to identify surficial iron staining, which serve as a proxy for outcropping sulphide mineralization. In addition, high-resolution UAS-based digital surface models are created for geomorphological characterisation of the landscape to accurately reveal landslide features. UAS-based magnetic data suggests that the targeted magmatic unit is characterized by a pattern of distinct positive and negative magnetic anomalies. We apply a 3D magnetization vector inversion model (MVI) on the UAS-based magnetic data to estimate the magnetic properties and shape of the magmatic body. By means of using constraints in the inversion, (1) optical UAS-based data and legacy drill cores are used to assign significant magnetic properties to areas that are associated with the mineralized Asuk Mb, and (2) the Earth’s magnetic and the paleomagnetic field directions are used to evaluate the general magnetization direction in the magmatic units. Our results indicate that the geometry of the mineralized target can be estimated as a horizontal sheet of constant thickness, and that the magnetization of the unit has a strong remanent component formed during a period of Earth’s magnetic field reversal. The magnetization values obtained in the MVI are in a similar range as the measured ones from a drillcore intersecting the targeted unit. Both the magnetics and topography confirm that parts of the target unit were displaced by landslides. We identified several fully detached and presumably rotated blocks in the obtained model. The model highlights magnetic anomalies that correspond to zones of mineralization and is used to identify outcrops for sampling. Our study demonstrates the potential and efficiency of using multi-sensor high-resolution UAS data to constrain the geometry of partially exposed geological units and assist exploration targeting in difficult, poorly exposed terrain.


2021 ◽  
Vol 859 ◽  
pp. 158290
Author(s):  
S. Udhayakumar ◽  
G. Jagadish Kumar ◽  
E. Senthil Kumar ◽  
M. Navaneethan ◽  
K. Kamala Bharathi

1965 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Parsons

AbstractLocal magnetic anomalies of large magnitude are found over the marginal ultrabasic rocks of the Loch Ailsh intrusion. An intrepretation of these anomalies based on the measured magnetic properties of the pyroxenites shows that they are not reconcilable with a low-angle structure as required by the hypothesis that the intrusion is a stratified laccolite, and suggests that they form a steeply dipping sheet at the syenite-limestone contact. Similar anomalies occur along the southern margin of the Loch Borralan complex, suggesting steeply dipping marginal ultrabasic rocks.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alireza Malehmir ◽  
Georgiana Maries ◽  
Emma Bäckström ◽  
Monika Schön ◽  
Paul Marsden

Geophysics ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 1945-1951 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard S. Lu ◽  
John Mariano ◽  
Dennis E. Willen

A finite‐impulse‐response filter was implemented on a computer with massively parallel processors to reduce a magnetic anomaly map to the magnetic pole, allowing each grid node to have a different inclination and declination (differential reduction to the pole, DRTP). The dramatic speed improvement of such an implementation for the filter design and application via space‐domain convolution makes DRTP a practical tool for hydrocarbon and mineral exploration. Application of this tool to magnetic anomalies in east China reveals that the northward shift in position of the anomaly maximum generated by DRTP is 6 km for anomalies with dominant wavelengths of approximately 25 km in the northernmost part of the study area. The shift increases as the anomaly wavelength increases. Shifts for all anomaly wavelengths are even larger in the southern part of the study area, where the magnetic inclination is lower. The shift in position of the anomaly maximum for anomalies of wavelengths 25 km in the northernmost area produced by DRTP is 2 km less than that produced by a conventional reduction to the pole using the inclination and declination at the central location of the study area. Once again, such differences in shifts are larger for anomalies of longer wavelengths. The farther away from the central location, the greater is the absolute value of the difference.


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