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Unsupervised classification techniques, such as cluster algorithms, are routinely used for structural exploration and integration of multiple frequency bands of remotely sensed spectral datasets. However, up to now, very few attempts have been made towards using unsupervised classification techniques for rapid, automated, and objective information extraction from large airborne geophysical data suites. We employ fuzzy c-means (FCM) cluster analysis for the rapid and largely automated integration of complementary geophysical datasets comprising airborne radiometric and magnetic as well as ground-based gravity data, covering a survey area of approximately 5000 km(2) located 100 km east- south-east of Johannesburg, South Africa, along the south-eastern limb of the Bushveld layered mafic intrusion complex. After preparatory data processing and normalisation, the three datasets are subjected to FCM cluster analysis, resulting in the generation of a zoned integrated geophysical map delineating distinct subsurface units based on the information the three input datasets carry. The fuzzy concept of the cluster algorithm employed also provides information about the significance of the identified zonation. According to the nature of the input datasets, the integrated zoned map carries information from near-surface depositions as well as rocks underneath the sediment cover. To establish a sound geological association of these zones we refer the zoned geophysical map to all available geological information, demonstrating that the zoned geophysical map as obtained from FCM cluster analysis outlines geological units that are related to Bushveld-type, other Proterozoic- and Karoo-aged rocks.
Near-surface seismic traveltime tomography using a direct-push source and surface-planted geophones
(2009)
Information about seismic velocity distribution in heterogeneous near-surface sedimentary deposits is essential for a variety of environmental and engineering geophysical applications. We have evaluated the suitability of the minimally invasive direct-push technology for near-surface seismic traveltime tomography. Geophones placed at the surface and a seismic source installed temporarily in the subsurface by direct-push technology quickly acquire reversed multioffset vertical seismic profiles (VSPs). The first-arrival traveltimes of these data were used to reconstruct the 2D seismic velocity distribution tomographically. After testing this approach on synthetic data, we applied it to field data collected over alluvial deposits in a former river floodplain. The resulting velocity model contains information about high- and low-velocity anomalies and offers a significantly deeper penetration depth than conventional refraction tomography using surface-planted sources and receivers at the investigated site. A combination of refraction seismic and direct-push data increases resolution capabilities in the unsaturated zone and enables reliable reconstruction of velocity variations in near-surface unconsolidated sediments. The final velocity model structurally matches the results of cone-penetration tests and natural gamma-radiation data acquired along the profile. The suitability of multiple rapidly acquired reverse VSP surveys for 2D tomographic velocity imaging of near-surface unconsolidated sediments was explored.