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Study of carbonate concretions using imaging...
Journal article

Study of carbonate concretions using imaging spectroscopy in the Frontier Formation, Wyoming

Abstract

Imaging spectroscopy is applied to study diagenetic processes of the Wall Creek Member of the Cretaceous Frontier Formation, Wyoming. Visible Near-Infrared and Shortwave-Infrared hyperspectral cameras were used to scan near vertical and well-exposed outcrop walls to analyze lateral and vertical geochemical variations. Reflectance spectra were analyzed and compared with high-resolution laboratory spectral and hyperspectral imaging data. Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM) and Mixture Tuned Matched Filtering (MTMF) classification algorithms were applied to quantify facies and mineral abundances in the Frontier Formation. MTMF is the most effective and reliable technique when studying spectrally similar materials. Classification results show that calcite cement in concretions associated with the channel facies is homogeneously distributed, whereas the bar facies was shown to be interbedded with layers of non-calcite-cemented sandstone.

Authors

de Linaje VA; Khan SD; Bhattacharya J

Journal

International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation, Vol. 66, , pp. 82–92

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

April 1, 2018

DOI

10.1016/j.jag.2017.11.010

ISSN

1569-8432
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