The ASTER (Advanced Space-borne Thermal Emission and Reflection radiometer) data, including all the 3 parts: VNIR (Visible and Near-Infrared), SWIR (Short Wave Infrared), TIR (Thermal Infrared), were applied for extraction of mineral deposits, such as the Ni-Cu deposit in eastern Tianshan, the gypsum in western Tianshan, and the borax in Tibetan. This paper discusses the extraction methodology using the ASTER remote sensing data and reveals the good extraction results. This paper bravely represents the summary of the main achievement for this field by the scientists in other countries and gives a comparison with the works by others. The new achievements, described in this paper, comprise the extraction of anomalies for Ni-Cu deposit, gypsum, and borax.
Since the appearance of ASTER in Dec. 1999, the use of ASTER data in mineral prospecting has increased in recent years because of its relatively low cost, broad coverage, and unique integral bands highly sensitive to alteration minerals (i.e. minerals known to surround target minerals). The ASTER data set contains visible, shortwave infrared and thermal bands. Because the spectral bands of ASTER are sensitive to absorption of some minerals. The proper preprocessing and combination of these bands can produce relative mineral alteration distributions such as illite, alunite, kaolinite, carbonates and so on. Kanlinowski and Oliver [
Since then the remote sensing anomaly technology has been spread throughout the country. By the same time our research effort was concentrated on the application of ASTER data for resolving the problems, left with ETM, on the classification of remote sensing anomalies, on the anomaly extraction of new mineral types. We have developed a simplified algorithm for temperature and emission separation using de-correlation stretch function, proposed at first by Gilespie, et al. in 1998 [
Spectroscopy for RS may be defined as the study of the interaction of earth matter with electromagnetic radiation. The regions of the RS EMR for geological work with goal in detection and exploration of mineral resources are visible (0.35 - 0.70 μm), near-infrared and SWIR (0.7 - 2.5 μm), TIR (8 - 13 μm) (see
For geologic materials, electronic processes provide information about the presence and nature of a particular iron and its environment, about adjacentions, or about defects in specific crystal locations. Thus, information concerning bulk composition is of an indirect nature.
Vibrational processes are governed by three characteristic properties of the material: the chemical composi- tion, the geometry and equilibrium positions of the constituent atoms, and potential field of the interatomic
No | ETM | OHA-ASTER-SWR (Microns) | ASTER-TIR (Microns) Emission | Examples | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
OHA | FCA | 5.6 | 7.8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | |||
2.145 - 2.225 | 2.235 - 2.365 | 2.36 - 2.43 | 8.125 - 8.475 | 8.475 - 8.825 | 8.925 - 9.275 | 10.25 - 10.95 | 10.95 - 11.65 | |||||
1 | Porphyry copper | H | H | H | RL | *TuWu #Xiamari | ||||||
2 | Skarns Pb-Zn, Cu | H | H | L | *ShaQuanZi | |||||||
3 | Ultra-basic Cu-Ni, Ni | H | H | XL | *Huangshan ^LuoDong | |||||||
4 | Carbonate | H | H | XL | * | |||||||
5 | Smithsonite | H | XL | *Chaqu Pa Cha | ||||||||
6 | Gypsum | H | H: (8% − 6%)*(8% − 9%) | XL | *West Tianshan | |||||||
7 | Celestine | L: ((−11%) − (−10%)) | RL | XL | *Da Feng shan | |||||||
8 | Boron min. | (8% − 7%)*ABS (8%% − 6% + 8% − 5%) | *Bankog Co | |||||||||
9 | Sederite | H | (29% − 28% − 24% − 25%)*3 | *Guanyinshan | ||||||||
10 | Kaolinclay | H | XL | *Jingdezhen | ||||||||
11 | Iron ore | H | *Abagong | |||||||||
12 | Porcelain clay | H | Jingdezhen | |||||||||
Remarks | This table was constructed by Zhang in 1992-2012 y. H―high; L―low | LuoDong Ni deposits, ShaQuanZi Pb-Zn & Xiamari Cu deposits were discovered by our work. XL―extremely low; RL―relative low | *Tianshan #Gangdisi ^Beishan |
forces representative of inter-atomic bonds and angles. Consequently the information available is directly related to bulk composition.
Rocks are basically assemblages of minerals. So much of our referred spectra presented by USGS and ASU are mostly for pure minerals since the spectrum of a rock is typically some composition of the spectra of its constituent minerals.
So the inverse problem is usually quite complicated. Nevertheless we have succeeded in extracting RS anomalies of 12 different types of mineral deposits (
Thermal infrared spectral range of 8 - 13 μm, the thermal infrared spectra in the ASTER data include information of temperature and emissivity. In order to geological applications, it’s necessary to get the thermal infrared spectral emissivity. The method “discrimination method of extremes on the spectral shape” was applied based on de-correlation stretch (or transformation) in this paper. The information of carbonate, sulphate, and ultrabasic rocks were extracted.
The ASTER data (all of the Visual-near Infrared, the Short Wave IR and the Thermal IR) were used for the extraction of R.S. anomaly for the hydroxyl minerals in hydrothermal alteration zone of metallic ore deposit , the carbonaceous (marble, smithsonite, dolomite, calcite) and sulfates (gypsum, celestine) sediments.
The early use of PCA for extraction of TM anomaly was made by Crosta and Moore [
The ASTER data (all of the Visual-near Infrared, the Short Wave IR and the Thermal IR) were used for the extraction of R.S. anomaly for the carbonaceous (marble, smithsonite, dolomite, calcite) and sulfates (gypsum, celestine) sediments. The main processing techniques used are:
・ The De-correlation Stretch (or transformation);
・ The Band-Selective Principle Component Analysis (PCA);
・ The Combinatorial(combinational) Band Ratio Analysis;
・ The Relative Band Depth (RBD);
・ The Piece-Wise Thresholding.
The De-correlation stretch is especially effective on ASTER-TIR images in which channels are highly correlated by temperature. De-correlation is used for separation of temperature and thermal emission (see
Using these techniques we have inversed quite a lot science of ETM + and ASTER data and gained high quality result. For example we take the discovery of Luodong Ni deposit, the determination of gypsum, and the determination of borax .
Owing to the severe shortage of potash fertilizer in China, great attention has been paid to make full use of achievements of geophysics and remote sensing in exploration of potash salt in China during the past more than 50 years. Because of the lacking of diagnostic spectral property for potash salt, we tried to use the gypsum for indirect path for this problem.
The specific spectral characteristic for gypsum shown in
The usage of borax on Qinghai-Tibet Plateau for medical, glazier and other purposes takes special role. The exploitation of borax is one of the important component parts of Tibetan industry all along. BanKogCo was taken as a known borax deposit for the application of ASTER data. BanKogCo belongs to the moderately mineralized carbonate type. It is located 10 km in the east from SilingCo or 120 km in the north-east from the famous NamCo as the biggest saline lake in Tibet. BankogCo consists of 3 small lakes. The sedimentary sub-environment in BankogCo district is shown in
The Combinatorial Band-Ratio Analysis of the SWIR was studied for the borax anomaly and to avoid the false anomaly from carbonates and argillaceous sediments. Besides BanKogCo the borax anomaly appears at the east of NamkaCo. This region is an undiscovered area. Since the anomaly is even stronger than that for BanKogCo, it is worth carrying on exploration after some ground truth investigations (
This research was jointly supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 41102205), Special Funds Projects for Basic Scientific Research Business Expenses of Mineral Resources Research Institutes in Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences (Nos. K1208, K1213). We thank greatly Prof. Yang Jianmin for Field work in discovery of Luodong Ni Deposit.
Yu-Jun Zhang,Fo-Jun Yao, (2015) Interpreting the Shortwave Infrared & Thermal Infrared Regions of Remote Sensed Electromagnetic Spectrum with Application for Mineral-Deposits Exploration. Journal of Applied Mathematics and Physics,03,254-261. doi: 10.4236/jamp.2015.32037