Authors / CoAuthors
Geophysical Acquisition & Processing Section
Abstract
Total magnetic intensity (TMI) data measures variations in the intensity of the Earth's magnetic field caused by the contrasting content of rock-forming minerals in the Earth crust. Magnetic anomalies can be either positive (field stronger than normal) or negative (field weaker) depending on the susceptibility of the rock. The 2019 Total magnetic Intensity (TMI) grid of Australia has a grid cell size of ~3 seconds of arc (approximately 80 m). This grid only includes airborne-derived TMI data for onshore and near-offshore continental areas. Since the sixth edition was released in 2015, data from 234 new surveys have been added to the database, acquired mainly by the State and Territory Geological Surveys. The new grid was derived from a re-levelling of the national magnetic grid database. The survey grids were levelled to each other, and to the Australia Wide Airborne Geophysical Survey (AWAGS), which serves as a baseline to constrain long wavelengths in the final grid. It is estimated that 33 500 000 line-kilometres of survey data were acquired to produce the 2019 grid data, about 2 000 000 line-kilometres more than for the previous edition. The data are processed via standard methods to ensure the response recorded is that due only to the rocks in the ground. The results produce datasets that can be interpreted to reveal the geological structure of the sub-surface. The processed data is checked for quality by GA geophysicists to ensure that the final data released by GA are fit-for-purpose. . This Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2020 - Enhanced Products Package - upward continued image (UC36km42kmRes) is a pseudocolour image of the TMI grid of the Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2019. This grid has a cell size of 0.00083 degrees (approximately 88m). This pseudocolour image shows the magnetic response of subsurface features with contrasting magnetic susceptibilities. The image can also be used to locate structural features such as dykes.
Product Type
dataset
eCat Id
144716
Contact for the resource
Point of contact
Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
Canberra
ACT
2601
Australia
Keywords
- theme.ANZRC Fields of Research.rdf
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- EARTH SCIENCES
- ( Data centre )
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- NCI
- ( Discipline )
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- Earth sciences
- ( Discipline )
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- geophysics
- ( Feature type )
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- image
- ( Place )
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- Australia
- ( Place )
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- None
- ( Project )
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- survey 1324
- ( Theme )
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- GADDS2.0
- ( Theme )
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- TMI
- ( Theme )
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- AWAGS
- ( Theme )
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- magnetics
- ( Theme )
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- magnetism
- ( Theme )
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- palaeomagnetism
- ( Theme )
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- airborne digital data
- ( Theme )
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- geophysical survey
- ( Theme )
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- mag
- ( Theme )
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- total magnetic intensity
- ( Theme )
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- pseudocolour
- ( Theme )
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- image
- ( Theme )
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- reduced to the pole
- ( Theme )
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- pseudocolour image
- ( Theme )
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- raster
- ( Theme )
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- upward continued
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- Published_External
Publication Date
2020-11-09T00:00:00
Creation Date
2020-11-09T00:00:00
Security Constraints
Legal Constraints
Status
completed
Purpose
Maintenance Information
notPlanned
Topic Category
geoscientificInformation
Series Information
Lineage
This Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2020 - Enhanced Products Package - upward continued image (UC36km42kmRes) includes an upward continued variable reduction to the pole (VRTP) of airborne-derived Total Magnetic Intensity (TMI) data for onshore and near off-shore continental areas (Poudjom Djomani et al., 2019). The Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2019 under project number 1324 was produced with a grid cell size of 0.00083 (approximately 88m), given in units of nT. It is estimated that 33 500 000 line-kilometres of survey data collected by State and Territory geological surveys and Geoscience Australia were acquired to produce the 2019 grid, about 2 000 000 line-kilometres more than for the previous edition. The 2019 magnetic grid was derived from a complete re-levelling of the national magnetic grid database. The survey grids were levelled to each other, and to the Australia Wide Airborne Geophysical Survey (AWAGS) (Milligan et al., 2009), which serves as a baseline to constrain long wavelengths in the final grid. The levelling and grid-merging procedure was described in detail in Minty et al. (2003). The new 2019 map compilation is comprised of a merge of 1059 survey grids. The addition of almost a decade's worth of new high-quality surveys adds significantly to the 2010 and 2015 versions of the map. Further processing was applied to the original TMI grid to reduce the magnetic effect of the Portland Smelter Complex (PSC) (Poudjom Djomani et al., 2019). The anomaly associated with the complex can have erroneous effects on products created using Fourier domain processing of the grid. A subset of the TMI grid covering the area of the PSC was cut for easy processing. Filling of the grid was done in MATLAB using function 'inpaintn' from Garcia (2020), based on Wang et al. (2012). This procedure resulted in an anomaly of +100nT in the region of the PSC. Further, a cosine averaging filter was applied to the PSC and its edges to remove the short wavelength anomalies which may lead to misinterpretation of the data. The processed subset grid was then overlain onto the national TMI grid as a final product. The data has had a variable reduction to the pole applied to centre the magnetic anomaly over the magnetised body. The VRTP processing followed a differential reduction to pole calculation up to 5th order polynomial. Magnetic inclination and declination were derived from the IGRF-15 geomagnetic reference model using a data representative date and elevation representative of the survey. An upward continuation was calculated by applying a fast Fourier transform (FFT) process to the Total Magnetic Intensity grid of the Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2019 to produce this grid. The upward continuation manipulates the magnetic data to enhance the large deep source anomalies and minimises shallow anomalies. This image was calculated using an algorithm from the INTREPID Geophysics software package. Details of the specifications of individual airborne surveys can be found in the Fourteenth Edition of the Index of Airborne Geophysical Surveys (Percival, 2014). This Index is also available online at http://pid.geoscience.gov.au/dataset/79134. References: Garcia, D., 2020. Inpaint over missing data in 1-D, 2-D, 3-D, ... nd arrays. Intrepid Geophysics http://intrepid-geophysics.com. https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/27994-inpaint-over-missing-data-in-1-d-2-d-3-d-nd-arrays), MATLAB Central File Exchange. Milligan, P.R., Minty, B.R.S., Richardson, M. and Franklin, R., 2009. The Australia-wide Airborne Geophysical Survey accurate continental magnetic coverage. Preview, No. 138, p. 1-128. Minty, B.R.S., Milligan, P.R., Luyendyk, A.P.J. and Mackey, T., 2003. Merging airborne magnetic surveys into continental-scale compilations. Geophysics, 68 (3), 988-995. Percival, P.J., 2014. Index of airborne geophysical surveys (Fourteenth Edition). Poudjom Djomani, Y., Minty, B.R.S., Hutchens, M., Lane, R.J.L. 2019, Total Magnetic Intensity (TMI) Grid of Australia 2019 - seventh edition - 80 m cell size. Geoscience Australia, Canberra. http://dx.doi.org/10.26186/5e9cf3f2c0f1d, eCat record number 131505; Wang, G., Garcia, D., Liu, Y., de Jeu, R. and Dolman, A.J., 2012, A three-dimensional gap filling method for large geophysical datasets: Application to global satellite soil moisture observations: Environmental Modelling Software, 30, 139-142, doi: 10.1016/j.envsoft.2011.10.015.
Parent Information
Geophysical Data Collection - Airborne Geophysics
UUID - ddeb0fc4-32e3-4913-80f2-f4249b17a925,
eCat ID -
Extents
[-43.9301, -9.0265, 105.9996, 154.6635]
Reference System
GDA94 (EPSG:4283)
Spatial Resolution
Service Information
Associations
Downloads and Links
File available for download in various formats from the GADDS2 portal
Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2020 - Enhanced Products Package - upward continued image (UC36km42kmRes) file download
Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2020 - Enhanced Products Package - upward continued image (UC36km42kmRes) OPeNDAP
Source Information
This Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2020 - Enhanced Products Package - upward continued image (UC36km42kmRes) is a pseudocolour image of the TMI VRTP upward continued data for the Magnetic Anomaly Map of Australia, Seventh Edition, 2019 produced by Geoscience Australia.