Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B7)

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INTERPRETATION OF AIRVIEWS AND SATELLITE IMAGES: MORE POTENTIALITIES FOUND 
Valentina B. Sokolova, Chief of Aerophotogeology Research Group of "Sevzapgeologia" State Geological 
Enterprise, Russia 
Vladimir V. Proskuryakov, President of Northwest Regional Geological Center, Russia 
Commission VII - Resources and Environmental Monitoring 
KEY WORDS: Photogeological Mapping, Unconventional Method, Basement, Great Depth. 
ABSTRACT: 
The authors have revealed a new solution in the field of plotting aerial and remote survey data, which enables to 
visualize crystalline formations deep beneath the Earth's surface. That lithological/facial features of deep-seated 
geological bodies turn out to become visible makes us to admit that we are facing natural phenomena still unknown 
and independent in terms of time and space. Such ability to discern the results of these phenomena offers many 
prospects in various fields of geoscience. This presentation demonstrates how successfully a practical utilization of the 
said ability comes off in geological industry. 
This presentation is intended to inform an audience and 
geological community on abilities the remote sensing 
data conceals. One of such "secret" powers consists in 
that a pattern of deep-seated crystalline formations can 
be recognized (invention covered by Author's Certificate 
31393026, registered January 3, 1988, in the former 
USSR). This, to a great extent, facilitates a procedure of 
constructing geological maps showing a top surface of a 
basement overlain by a "sandwich" of sedimentary strata. 
The pattern can be produced to view in a scale range 
from 1/10,000 to 1/1,000,000. Geological plotting of 
compound multilayer sections is known to be a toilsome 
job requiring expensive methods in the field of 
geophysics, geochemistry, drilling, aerogeology, remote 
sensing, etc. And yet, sometimes even such a 
multidisciplinary study fails to yield a complete picture, 
be it a top surface of a buried basement or some deep- 
seated structural level of unconformity. As for the 
commonly applied conventional airborne survey 
methods, these all are known, as it is admitted in the 
manuals, to possess a low efficiency in case of deep 
mapping. What makes their application fairly limited is a 
sedimentary cover’s thickness, lithified rocks in the cover 
sequence, geological setting of an area in question, its 
geographic localtion, how well the area is economically 
developed, and many other factors as well. 
True, what we suggest as a method of constructing the 
geological maps for various depth intervals on the basis 
of airviews and satellite images may sound rather 
uncommon, and yet the Earth pictures are such that they 
enable to reconstruct the lithological/facial mode of a 
plate basement and the surfaces of regional 
unconformities in the very deeply seated crystalline rocks 
varying in composition. To acquire indispensable data, 
one needs nothing but airphotos and satellite flown 
Images, and topographic base maps to make the latter's 
geolocation. To avoid any predisposition when 
constructing geological maps based on airborne-satellite- 
flown survey data, we abstain from examining any 
geological information already available for the area in 
scrutiny. 
As far as Well-exposed areas are concerned, to recognize 
and plot geological objects there by dint of natural 
633 
indicators is known to have been a long-time practice. 
Specialists can easily interpret the patterns on the basis 
of airborne and satellite data: indeed, they are quite 
confident in plotting linear and planar elements, as well 
as such rock features as a texture, structure and 
composition, a shape of a geological body, its 
boundaries, strike and dip of layers, etc. 
Thanks to natural indicators, plotting of very deeply 
seated crystalline formations is possible, too; here the 
indicators are put together in the form of lines 
reproducing similar landscape components which one 
identifies on remote survey photos. Field work experience 
has proved each such line to correspond to particular 
sets of arranged in persistently repeated rows ultimate 
groups of unambiguous landscape components. The 
latter comprise minute and microtopographic features, 
nano- and mesocombinations of plant communities and 
water-impregnated areas, these being arranged in 
nonrandomly oriented linear or curvilinear forms. No 
study has been made yet as to how texture and structure 
of the crystalline rocks are translated vertically up to the 
surface, whereupon they give shape to the abovesaid 
landscape complexes. 
Thus, a spatial combination of landscape components 
that form up an array of the lines, or "symbols", 
unmistakenly reproduces a composition of deep-seated 
crystalline formations as an imprint on a surface of the 
sedimentary rocks. Geological mapping, prospecting and 
detail exploration in various landscape- and geozones 
have established and proved this phenomenon quite 
definitely. The lines, as an outcoming information, are 
pinpointed on a photo and then plotted on a topographic 
map where these are called the lines with "preferred 
orientation" (LPO). Borrowed from F.H.Lahee's "Field 
geology", NY, 1961, this definition has been reserved to 
the authors since 1978. Normally, the lines with 
resemblant patterns make up persistent "cartographic 
images” (CI) - a definition borrowed from A.M.Berliand's 
"An image of a space: a map and information'(Moscow, 
"Mys!" Publishing House, 1986, in Russian). As it shows 
up from the LPO's, a particular Cl corresponds to 
particular features of a particular deep-seated rock. 
Provided a specialist knows by appearances the 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B7. Vienna 1996 
 
	        
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