Abstract

Geological modeling currently uses various computer-based applications. Data harmonization at the semantic level using ontologies is essential to make these applications interoperable. Since geo-modeling is part of several multidisciplinary projects, interoperability requires semantic harmonization to exchange information between geological applications and integrate other domain knowledge at a general level. Therefore, domain ontologies that describe geological knowledge must be based on a sound ontological background to ensure this knowledge is integrable. Faults are essential for understanding and solving structural problems but are complex to model because the concept of fault includes a group of geological entities with a distinct ontological nature. A fault can correspond to thin, deformed rock volumes or spatial arrangements resulting from the displacement of geological blocks, but at a broader scale, geologists describe faults as surfaces or components of complex fault arrays. Our work intends to harmonize these views by presenting a domain ontology, GeoFault, resting on the Basic Formal Ontology (BFO) and the GeoCore ontology. GeoCore and GeoFault support the parametric description of geological sites as a preliminary step for quantitative and qualitative analysis. We have proposed GeoFault after systematically revising the literature and several knowledge-acquisition sessions with expert structural geologists. The ontology formalizes a vocabulary for fault “sensu stricto,” excluding ductile shear deformations. It covers the regional to outcrop scales, excluding structures at the microscopic, orogenic, and tectonics scales, and it avoids interpretive language associated with geological processes as far as possible. Extending the BFO and GeoCore ontologies allows the fault concept to be related to formal ontological classes in a consistent semantic-rich framework. The ontology artifact is implemented in OWL 2, validated by competency questions with two use cases, and tested using an in-house ontology-driven data entry application. The GeoFault ontology is publicly available and provides a solid framework for clarifying fault knowledge and a foundation for many applications.

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