scholarly journals Photogrammetric mapping of fluvial channel sand-bodies in the Atane Formation at Paatuut, Nuussuaq, central West Greenland

1992 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. 41-46
Author(s):  
T Olsen

Upper Cretaceous deltaic sediments from the Atane Formation are well exposed in a series of steep-sided gullies at Paatuut on the south coast of Nuussuaq. The large exposures within the gullies allowed a large-scale sedimentological investigation of delta stratigraphy, sand-body geometry and fluvial style of the distributary channels. Multi-model photogrammetry was applied in several ways. Photogrammetric mapping of good exposures within the area produced accurate vertical sections up to 2 km long and 0.5 km high. A bed to bed stratigraphy of the delta cycles was established and the sand-bodies within each cycle correlated. The horizontal extent of the sand-bodies was subsequently mapped photogrammetrically using the already orientated stereomodels. This mapping allowed a three-dimensional interpretation of the sand-body geometry. Cross-sections of the sand-bodies and the sand-body geometry formed the basis for the interpretation of the fluvial style of the distributary channels. Using the three-dimensional photogrammetric data the width/thickness ratio, the sinuosity and the shape of sand-bodies as well as of palaeochannels are described. These data are useful when modelling the reservoir geometry in deltaic hydrocarbon fields.

2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (6) ◽  
pp. 1678-1687 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Pierre Da Costa ◽  
Stefan Oprean ◽  
Pierre Baylou ◽  
Christian Germain

AbstractThough three-dimensional (3D) imaging gives deep insight into the inner structure of complex materials, the stereological analysis of 2D snapshots of material sections is still necessary for large-scale industrial applications for reasons related to time and cost constraints. In this paper, we propose an original framework to estimate the orientation distribution of generalized cylindrical structures from a single 2D section. Contrary to existing approaches, knowledge of the cylinder cross-section shape is not necessary. The only requirement is to know the area distribution of the cross-sections. The approach relies on minimization of a least squares criterion under linear equality and inequality constraints that can be solved with standard optimization solvers. It is evaluated on synthetic data, including simulated images, and is applied to experimental microscopy images of fibrous composite structures. The results show the relevance and capabilities of the approach though some limitations have been identified regarding sensitivity to deviations from the assumed model.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (24) ◽  
pp. 8190
Author(s):  
Pauli Putkiranta ◽  
Matti Kurkela ◽  
Matias Ingman ◽  
Aino Keitaanniemi ◽  
Aimad El Issaoui ◽  
...  

The deterioration of road conditions and increasing repair deficits pose challenges for the maintenance of reliable road infrastructure, and thus threaten, for example, safety and the fluent flow of traffic. Improved and more efficient procedures for maintenance are required, and these require improved knowledge of road conditions, i.e., improved data. Three-dimensional mapping presents possibilities for large-scale collection of data on road surfaces and automatic evaluation of maintenance needs. However, the development and, specifically, evaluation of large-scale mobile methods requires reliable references. To evaluate possibilities for close-range, static, high-resolution, three-dimensional measurement of road surfaces for reference use, three measurement methods and five instrumentations are investigated: terrestrial laser scanning (TLS, Leica RTC360), photogrammetry using high-resolution professional-grade cameras (Nikon D800 and D810E), photogrammetry using an industrial camera (FLIR Grasshopper GS3-U3-120S6C-C), and structured-light handheld scanners Artec Leo and Faro Freestyle. High-resolution photogrammetry is established as reference based on laboratory measurements and point density. The instrumentations are compared against one another using cross-sections, point–point distances, and ability to obtain key metrics of defects, and a qualitative assessment of the processing procedures for each is carried out. It is found that photogrammetric models provide the highest resolutions (10–50 million points per m2) and photogrammetric and TLS approaches perform robustly in precision with consistent sub-millimeter offsets relative to one another, while handheld scanners perform relatively inconsistently. A discussion on the practical implications of using each of the examined instrumentations is presented.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-36
Author(s):  
Zhangqing Sun ◽  
Xingguo Huang ◽  
Hongliang Li ◽  
Anguai Lei ◽  
Nuno Vieira da Silva ◽  
...  

The current energetic transition policies reenabled the importance of producing nuclear energy in producing electricity. Uranium is the principal fuel used in nuclear power plants, and mineral deposits containing this element are of strategic importance. The successful development of sandstone uranium deposits benefits from three-dimensional (3D) geophysical characterization of sand bodies in uranium reservoir. To solve this problem, a method based on 3D geostatistical resistivity inversion is adopted. Firstly, we analyze the application of that method to the problem in hand and introduce a workflow for analyzing the data. Secondly, through petro-physical sensitivity analysis, we identify the logging parameters that can characterize sandstone in this context, and we use that as the parameter estimated by the geostatistical inversion outlined herein. Then, the 3D data of inversion representing the sandstone of uranium reservoir is obtained by the 3D geostatistical resistivity inversion, demonstrating an accuracy well within an acceptable level of accuracy. Finally, the 3D data of inversion is applied to 3D spatial characterization of a sand body in uranium reservoir inverting a field dataset. Our method is useful in determining the location of drilling wells for exploration and development of sandstone uranium deposits.


2010 ◽  
Vol 181 (4) ◽  
pp. 377-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damien Bonté ◽  
Laurent Guillou-Frottier ◽  
Cynthia Garibaldi ◽  
Bernard Bourgine ◽  
Simon Lopez ◽  
...  

Abstract Assessment of the underground geothermal potential requires the knowledge of deep temperatures (1–5 km). Here, we present new temperature maps obtained from oil boreholes in the French sedimentary basins. Because of their origin, the data need to be corrected, and their local character necessitates spatial interpolation. Previous maps were obtained in the 1970s using empirical corrections and manual interpolation. In this study, we update the number of measurements by using values collected during the last thirty years, correct the temperatures for transient perturbations and carry out statistical analyses before modelling the 3D distribution of temperatures. This dataset provides 977 temperatures corrected for transient perturbations in 593 boreholes located in the French sedimentary basins. An average temperature gradient of 30.6°C/km is obtained for a representative surface temperature of 10°C. When surface temperature is not accounted for, deep measurements are best fitted with a temperature gradient of 25.7°C/km. We perform a geostatistical analysis on a residual temperature dataset (using a drift of 25.7°C/km) to constrain the 3D interpolation kriging procedure with horizontal and vertical models of variograms. The interpolated residual temperatures are added to the country-scale averaged drift in order to get a three dimensional thermal structure of the French sedimentary basins. The 3D thermal block enables us to extract isothermal surfaces and 2D sections (iso-depth maps and iso-longitude cross-sections). A number of anomalies with a limited depth and spatial extension have been identified, from shallow in the Rhine graben and Aquitanian basin, to deep in the Provence basin. Some of these anomalies (Paris basin, Alsace, south of the Provence basin) may be partly related to thick insulating sediments, while for some others (southwestern Aquitanian basin, part of the Provence basin) large-scale fluid circulation may explain superimposed cold and warm anomalies.


Author(s):  
V. Bagnolo ◽  
N. Paba

Abstract. Despite the high standard guaranteed by 3D scanning technology, image based modeling establishes the most widely used technique for surface reconstruction, being a cheaper and more portable approach. The strong increase in the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), is increasingly affirming and consolidating over the years. Being more cheap and portable than the active sensors approach, the combination of photogrammetry and drones is widely used for different applications both for large scale mapping and for documentation of architecture and archaeological heritage. UAV based photogrammetry allows for rapid accurate mapping and three-dimensional modelling. Over the last two decades, the study of archaeological sites have benefited from the constant evolution of sensor-based surveying techniques, finding effective application for purely visualization purposes or for the extraction of metric data. The Punic-Roman temple "Sardus Pater Babai" in southern Sardinia (Italy), has been the subject of a massive anastylosis. The close-range photogrammetry technique, exploiting the images produced by a UAV consumer and the GNSS system data, has allowed the creation of metrically correct 2D and 3D models useful also for an effective visualization of the information. A series of ortho-images has been extracted in order to represent plan, elevations and cross-sections of the monument.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
X. J. Zhong ◽  
T. J. Cui ◽  
J. F. Zhang ◽  
W. M. Yu

The parabolic equation (PE) method is a good choice in solving large-scale problems, but the resultant matrix is usually ill conditioned. In this letter, we introduce the geometric optics (GO) management in the calculation of bistatic radar cross sections using three-dimensional vector PE method. This method manages the object surface by GO, and hence the ill-conditioned problem can be avoided. Examples are given using the presented method, original method, and the method of moments. Results show the validity and stability of the presented method.


1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (4) ◽  
pp. 865-871 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel H. Fruman ◽  
Ibtissem Benmansour ◽  
Che´rif Nouar ◽  
Thierry Bidot ◽  
Jean-Marc Vanel

Using an order of magnitude estimate of the leading terms in the equations of motion, the three-dimensional flow in a flooded ball bearing is reduced to the investigation of two-dimensional flow problems in a series of bearing cross sections. Combining, through appropriate compatibility conditions, the individual analytical solutions for the spaces confined between the cage and the inner wall of the rings, the halls and the rings and the balls and the cage’s holes, a very simple analytical model is derived. It allows the computation, in the laminar regime, of the flow rate, the pressure drop, and the velocity profile in different cross sections of the confined spaces. The results of the analytical model are confirmed by those obtained using a CFD code and extended to the turbulent regime. The analytical and numerical results are compared to those obtained from flow visualizations and velocity measurements conducted in a specially designed large scale model of a ball bearing. The agreement is very satisfactory.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio M. Casas ◽  
Pablo Calvín ◽  
Pablo Santolaria ◽  
Tania Mochales ◽  
Hmidou El-Ouardi ◽  
...  

<p> Multiple constraints, including poorly known parameters, determine along-strike changes of frontal thrust structures in fold-and-thrust belts. Along the 400 km long, continuous Central Moroccan Atlas belt, structural style shows significant changes, preserving similar figures of shortening. This implies the absence of large-scale vertical-axes rotations, as demonstrated by paleomagnetic studies accomplished during the development of this project. The main factors controlling thrust geometry are:</p><p>- the geometry of Triassic-Jurassic extensional basins subsequently inverted during Cenozoic compression, with especial mention to changes of cover thickness and orientation of structures</p><p>- transfer of displacement between the northern and southern thrust systems</p><p>- transfer of displacement between the basement (Paleozoic) units and the Mesozoic cover through the Upper Triassic detachment. This factor strongly determines the width of the belt in each transect, as it occurs in other basement-and-cover fold-and-thrust belts</p><p>- cover/detachment thickness ratio.</p><p>- localization and partitioning of deformation between different structures in the inner part and the borders of the massif</p><p>- amount of superposition between different cover thrust sheets, including folded thrusts</p><p>- structural style, changing from thin-skinned style to large recumbent folds along strike, probably depending on P-T conditions and cover thickness</p><p>- backthrusts related to low cover thickness/detachment thickness ratio, especially frequent in the northern Atlas thrusts</p><p>- differential shortening between sections related to layer-parallel shortening and folds associated with cleavage development in the central part of the chain</p><p>- influence of previous structures, such as individual diapirs, salt walls or igneous intrusions that modify the pre-compressional geometry of the detachment level, nucleate structures and favor buttressing. This feature can also be a source of errors in the calculation of shortening.</p><p> All these factors result in strong along-strike changes such as branching of thrust surfaces, progression of deformation towards the foreland and differential cleavage development. Influence of structures developed during the basinal/diapiric/igneous stage results in a variability of trends that varies between from less than 10° to more than 30°, what allows in some cases to distinguish between structures controlled by basinal features and newly formed thrusts.</p><p>In spite of the different techniques for cross-sections reconstruction, and in some cases, the different interpretations for the origin of structures, the shortening figures obtained along the chain are remarkably constant, on the range of 35 km, thus implying a 18 to 30% of shortening for most of the transects what attests for the reliability of the results.</p><p>Recognition and quantification of factors controlling the development of structures is the fundamental step to determine the main thrust surfaces, and the secondary backthrusts in a region where basin inversion is one of the main constraints. Structural criteria point to a dominant southward vergence and secondary northwards-directed thrusts. Minor strike-slip components were probably localized in the core of the chain. Present-day 3-D reconstruction of the Atlas is currently being done considering all these inputs as well as those obtained from merging the vast dataset obtained.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 329 ◽  
pp. 01001
Author(s):  
Qian Wang ◽  
Zuohao Wu ◽  
Jiapeng Zheng ◽  
Junkai Lu ◽  
Menghong Yu

Affected by complex fault blocks, sedimentary environment and reservoir physical properties, Jidong Oilfield generally develops small-scale sand bodies, accounting for 24.2% of the produced reserves of medium and low permeability reservoirs. Such sand bodies rely on elastic energy to develop and are difficult to use effectively. In this paper, through the three-dimensional hydraulic physical model experiment and the analysis of the oil layer-dry layer-mudstone mixed sand body, the reasons that affect the model parameters are obtained. The results show that: the length of the high-permeability reservoir area, the length of the intermediate-permeability dry layer area, the rate of change of permeability parameters, the viscosity of the construction fluid, and the construction displacement have an impact on the effect of fracturing enhanced injection energy storage.


2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (7) ◽  
pp. 798-811 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Calvert ◽  
Nathan Hayward ◽  
Rajesh Vayavur ◽  
Maurice Colpron

In 2004, two seismic reflection lines were shot across the Mesozoic Whitehorse trough and adjacent terranes. Three-dimensional first-arrival tomographic inversion is used to constrain lithology to 800–1200 m depth, and surface structures are extrapolated into the middle crust using the coincident reflection data. In the Yukon–Tanana terrane, the metasedimentary Snowcap assemblage is characterized by velocities of 4.5–5.5 km/s, while in Quesnellia, velocities of 5.0–6.0 km/s occur at 500 m depth, and probably represent igneous rocks of the Tatchun batholith. Across the Whitehorse trough, velocities >4.0 km/s correspond to clastic rocks of the Jurassic Laberge and Triassic Lewes River groups; velocities <4.0 km/s probably present the clastic Jurassic to Cretaceous Tantalus Formation. Several near-surface units with velocities of 2.0–3.0 km/s are identified; some correlate well with volcanic rocks of the Upper Cretaceous Carmacks Group, but others could be attributable to alluvial deposits or faulting. The Big Salmon fault is interpreted to dip southwest, implying that rocks of the Yukon–Tanana terrane extend beneath Quesnellia. Stikinia and Quesnellia underlie up to 5–8 km of Triassic to Early Cretaceous sedimentary strata, and appear to be a single allochthon within an 18–20 km deep synform above the Yukon–Tanana terrane, which we name the Northern Intermontane synform. In general, reflection geometries in the upper crust are complex, but are consistent with large-scale imbricate structures that have been dissected into numerous blocks by displacement along moderately to steeply dipping strike-slip faults, which may be part of a crustal-scale flower structure extending to the base of the crust.


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