Abstract

Geochemical anomaly patterns for metal exploration targeting usually reveal non-stationarity due mainly to the non-linear synthesis of ore-forming processes. The spectrum–area (S–A) multifractal filtering and the bidimensional empirical mode decomposition (BEMD) are robust methodologies for detecting geochemical anomalies with different scaling properties. The former portrays the generalized scale invariance characteristics of a geochemical image in the two-dimensional Fourier frequency domain. It relies on estimating scaling exponents of power-law functions in the spectral energy density plane to design filter functions that amplify a geochemical signal in specific frequency channels. The BEMD decomposes a geochemical image into a number of bidimensional intrinsic mode functions (BIMFs). It represents the spatial–frequency–energy distribution of a given image that suits non-stationary geochemical signals arising from non-linear Earth systems. This paper gauges the relevance of BEMD and S–A in signalizing frequency channels that correspond to regional- and local-scale geochemical anomalies through a comparative experiment in the Moalleman district, NE Iran. The BEMD filtered the multi-element anomaly map adaptively into a set of BIMFs (BIMF1, BIMF2, and BIMF3) and a residual signal, in order of decreasing frequency, yielding geochemical patterns with scaling characteristics from local to regional. The S–A model filtered the multi-element anomaly map into very high, high, and low frequency channels that characterize noise signatures and geochemical anomalies associated with local and regional ore-forming processes, respectively. The results indicate that the high frequency channel derived from the BEMD filtering (i.e., BIMF1) can portray more effectively local-scale metal-vectoring anomalies distributed at/around ore-controlling faults/fractures. However, the low frequency channel yielded by S–A filtering has enhanced effectively geochemical anomaly architectures that were developed through regional metallogenesis. Therefore, we considered the local-scale geochemical anomalies (i.e., BIMF1) to delimit metal-vectoring targets, whereby four exploration priorities were defined as new areas for further metal prospecting within the study area.

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