Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B7)

MAPPING OF HYDROTHERMALLY ALTERED AREAS IN VEGETATED TERRAIN, USING 
MULTISOURCE DATA INTEGRATION AND SEGMENTATION TECHNIQUES 
Raimundo Almeida-Filho 
Icaro Vitorello 
National Institute for Space Research - INPE 
C.P. 515 - Säo José dos Campos/SP/Brazil 
e-mail: rai@ltid.inpe.br 
Commission VII, Working Group 4 
KEY WORDS: Landsat images, aerial photographs, geology, thematic mapping, 
ABSTRACT 
Abstract Field spectra data were used to guide the selection of the best Landsat-TM bands to map areas of 
hydrothermally altered materials in a savanna vegetated terrain. Landsat images were merged with a digitalized aerial 
photograph via IHS techniques. The resulting hybrid products kept the high spatial resolution of the aerial photograph 
and the spectral information derived from the Landsat images. A supervised region classifier algorithm was applied to 
a segmented image, obtained from the hybrid product. The produced region classified image permitted the accurate 
mapping of the target areas, even in areas where vegetation (mainly herbaceous plants) covered up to 60% of the 
terrain surface. 
1. INTRODUCTION 
Several studies using airborne or orbital images 
have indicated the feasibility of mapping 
hydrothermally altered areas, which are potential 
sites for mineral deposits (Abrams et al., 1977; 
Prost, 1980; Rowan and Kahle, 1982; Podwysocki 
et al., 1983). These studies are based on the fact 
that diagnostic minerals associated with 
hydrothermal processes, such as iron-bearing 
minerals  (limonite) and  hydroxyl-bearing 
minerals (clays, K-micas etc), show diagnostic 
spectral features that allow their identification by 
remote sensing techniques. However, the use of 
these techniques has been constrained to arid and 
semi-arid environments with sparse vegetation 
cover that permit the spectral information to be 
collected directly from the rock-soil assemblage. 
Furthermore, in the tropics, the diagnostic 
minerals may also be ubiquitous products from 
weathering processes. On the other hand, strong 
leaching might cause the removal of the 
hydrothermal-derived products from alteration 
zones. Such environmental conditions drastically 
reduce the chance of successful use of these 
techniques in the tropics. So, the use of remote 
sensing techniques for mapping hydrothermally 
altered materials in the tropics requires judicious 
analysis of the role of the different environmental 
factors that contribute to the information 
registered by the sensor systems. In this study we 
7 
evaluate the feasibility of spectral discrimination 
of hydrothermally altered materials in a vegetated 
terrain, using the Serra do Mendes granitoid as a 
case-study area. 
2. STUDY AREA 
The study area is located in central Brazil, a 
region of tropical savanna climate, with a well- 
defined rainy summer and a dry winter. 
Weathering processes have created poor soils, 
with high concentration of iron and aluminum 
oxides. The vegetation is a  savanna-like 
vegetation cover constituted by sparse small trees 
and interspersed shrubs and herbaceous plants. 
The Serra do Mendes massif is one of the more 
than twenty granitoid bodies of middle-to-low 
Proterozoic age (Araüjo and Alves, 1979; Marini 
and Botelho, 1986) of the Tin Province of Goiás. 
The granitoid is a 22 km long by 10 km wide 
dome that rises up to 400 meters above the 
surrounding gneisses and migmatites of the 
Central Brazilian Shield of Archean age 
(Almeida et al., 1981). It is constituted mainly of 
dark-grey  biotite-granitoids with medium-to- 
coarse hypiodiomorphic granular texture. Facies 
of hydrothermal alteration, composed of 
greisenized and albitized muscovite-granitoids 
with cassiterite, have been found in the central 
part of the Serra do Mendes massif (Padilha and 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B7. Vienna 1996 
 
	        
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