Abstract

Mineral exploration produces a large amount of diverse geological and geophysical data, yet it can be difficult to combine all of this information into integrated models of subsurface geology. Gravity and magnetic data are the two most common geophysical datasets used in mineral exploration. They are commonly interpreted by developing 2D or 3D geological models, forward modelling the geophysical response, and modifying the models until they explain the observed data. Inversion techniques have also been developed to calculate 2D or 3D physical property models that explain observed geophysical responses. However, inversion of potential field data is hindered by the non-uniqueness of solutions. Application of default, geologically-unconstrained inversions to obtain estimated subsurface physical property models from gravity and aeromagnetic datasets is a common step in many exploration programs. Although the recovered models can help target anomalous features in the subsurface, a reliable model, consistent with all observed geological and geophysical information, can only be recovered by including geology-based constraints with the standard mathematical constraints. The University of British Columbia - Geophysical Inversion Facility?s (UBC-GIF) GRAV3D and MAG3D gravity and magnetic inversion packages (Li and Oldenburg, 1996, 1998) are particularly well suited to early stages of exploration where prior geological knowledge is limited.

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