Integration Of Remotely Sensed And Ancillary Geological Data For Assessing Mineral Resources In The Bathurst Inlet Area, N.W.T., Canada.

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. G. Fabbri
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
12
File Size:
791 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1989

Abstract

This paper aims at the application of quantitative criteria for evaluating the mineral potential of square cells representing areas in terrains being explored at a reconnaissance level. The assumption is made here that the evaluation methods used by an expert economic geologist can be organized into geological models for establishing associations within imaged areas, that correspond to pixels with similar characteristics. UTM-registered multiple data sets have been constructed which include seasonal LANDSAT 2 and 4 images, SEASAT scenes, selected airborne radar images, digitized aeromagnetic, gravity, bedrock geology and topographic elevation maps. The area of interest is located in the Bathurst Inlet, District of MacKenzie, N.W.T., where a preliminary mineral potential evaluation was performed by the Geological Survey of Canada to assess its suitability for a national park. The multiple data sets described in this paper can be used for many studies at different resolutions, for comparing processing methods in remote sensing and, most importantly, for evaluating the physical and spatial relationships between the different images in registered data sets.
Citation

APA: A. G. Fabbri  (1989)  Integration Of Remotely Sensed And Ancillary Geological Data For Assessing Mineral Resources In The Bathurst Inlet Area, N.W.T., Canada.

MLA: A. G. Fabbri Integration Of Remotely Sensed And Ancillary Geological Data For Assessing Mineral Resources In The Bathurst Inlet Area, N.W.T., Canada.. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1989.

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