Abstract

Modern airborne transient electromagnetic (ATEM) surveys typically span thousands of line kilometres requireing careful data processing. When surveys are flown in populated areas data processing becomes particularly time consuming, since the acquired data is contaminated by couplings to man made conductors (power lines, fences, pipes, etc). Coupled soundings must be removed from the dataset prior to inversion, but since the signature of couplings can be subtle and difficult to describe in general terms it has so far remained mostly a manual task. Here we train an artificial neural network (ANN) to recognize coupled soundings in previously processed data and use this network to identify couplings in other data. The approach provides a dramatic reduction in the time required for data processing, since one can directly apply the network to the raw data. We describe the neural network we use and present the inputs and normalizations required for maximizing the effectiveness of the network. We present the training state and performance of the network and finally compare inversions based on manually processed data and ANN processed data. The results show that a well trained network can produce a high quality processing of ATEM data, which is either ready for inversion or in need of minimal manual processing. The results are very promising and can significantly reduce the processing time and cost of large ATEM surveys.

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