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Remote Sensing of the Lithosphere

Remote Sensing of the Lithosphere. Objectives. Review fundamental concepts pertaining to soils, minerals and rocks, geologic structures, drainage patterns, and landforms Discuss spectral characteristics of soils, rocks, and minerals

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Remote Sensing of the Lithosphere

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  1. Remote Sensing of the Lithosphere

  2. Objectives • Review fundamental concepts pertaining to soils, minerals and rocks, geologic structures, drainage patterns, and landforms • Discuss spectral characteristics of soils, rocks, and minerals • Discuss, in general, how geological and geomorphological information can be extracted from remotely sensed data

  3. Introduction • Terrestrial surfaces only make up 26 % of Earth’s total surface • Most people live and depend on terrestrial surfaces • Identification, inventory, mapping, and monitoring of soils, rocks, etc. is crucial! • Soil in particular is essential to the Earth’s life-support system

  4. Soils • General Characteristics • SOIL IS NOT DIRT!!! • Nurtures life … • Four components: • Mineral matter • Organic matter • Water • Air • Mineral and organic matter constitute the soil matrix • Air and water are contained in pores or interstitial air spaces, the open spaces in the soil matrix

  5. Solum Soils • Vertical Cross Section: Surface to Bedrock • Bedrock • Regolith • Soil • Solum (true soil)

  6. Soils • Five Soil-Forming Factors • Geology, Climate, Topography, Biology, Chronology • Pedogenesis (soil formation): slow; involves complex interaction of physical, chemical, and biological processes

  7. Soils • Four Soil-Forming Processes • Addition, Loss, Trans-location, Transformation • Rate at which soil-forming processes occur is determined by soil-forming factors

  8. Soils • Soil Properties • Soil Physical Properties • Color • Texture • Structure • Consistence • Porosity • Soil Chemical Properties • Colloids • Cation Exchange Capacity • Acidity & Alkalinity

  9. Soils • Soil Color • Largely determined by the presence/absence of organic matter and oxides (iron, silica, aluminum, etc.) in a soil • Suggests composition and chemical makeup of soils • Munsell Color Chart

  10. Soils • Soil Texture • Particle size distribution • Relative proportion of different particle sizes • Particle size classes: • Gravel: > 2mm (not considered soil) • Sand: 0.05-2 mm (beach – gritty) • Very coarse: 1-2 mm • Coarse: 0.5-1 mm • Medium: 0.25-0.5 mm • Fine: 0.1-0.25 mm • Very fine: 0.05-0.1 • Silt: 0.002-0.05 mm (flour – silky) • Coarse: 0.02-0.05 mm • Medium: 0.006-0.02 mm • Fine: 0.002-0.006 mm • Clay: < 0.002 mm (pottery – sticky)

  11. Soils • Particle size classes

  12. Soils • Soil Texture Triangle • 12 soil textural classes • Texture classes based on the relative amounts of sand, silt, and clay in a soil sample • Best soils for plant growth: medium-textured soils

  13. Soils • Soil Structure • Arrangement of soil separates (sand, silt, clay) into peds (clumps or aggregates of particles) • Peds differ in: • Size • Shape • Stability

  14. Porous Non-porous Soils • Soil Porosity • Total volume of available pore spaces in soil • Function of soil texture and structure • Important porosity factors: pore size, pore continuity, pore shape, pore orientation, pore location • Permeability – ability of water to flow through soil

  15. Soils • Soil Moisture: Forms of Soil Moisture • Hygroscopic, Capillary, Gravitational • Adhesion – attraction of soil water to soil particles • Cohesion – attraction of water molecules to each other

  16. Soils • Soil Moisture: Plant Available Moisture • Field Capacity • Wilting Point

  17. Soils • Soil Moisture: Soil Water Budget • Precipitation (P) • Potential evapotransp. (PE) • Actual evapotransp. (AE) • Moisture surplus • (P > PE) • Soil moisture utilization • (AE > P) • Moisture deficit • (PE > AE) • Soil moisture recharge • (P > PE) after a period of deficit

  18. Cations Anions Cations Soils • Soil Chemistry • Soil solution • Ions • Anions (-) • Cations (+) • Soil colloids

  19. Soils • Soil Acidity/Alkalinity • pH scale ranges from 0 to 14 • Acid soils (lower pH) vs. Alkaline soils (higher pH) • Neutral (= 7)

  20. Soils • Soil Profile and Soil Horizons • Distinct horizontal layers within the upper 200 cm or so of soils --- result of soil-forming processes • Horizon forming at/near the surface = epipedon

  21. Soils • Soil Profile and Soil Horizons Eluviationhorizon Illuviationhorizon

  22. Soils • Soil Catena • Variation of soil horizons/soil profiles along transects

  23. Soils • Classification of Soils • Linkages between soils, climate, vegetation, and parent material • Provides information on the “quality’ of the environment • The Mapping Question: matter of scale … • The U.S. Soil Taxonomy • NRCS • Hierarchical system: soil orders (12) , soil suborders (48), soil great groups (230), soil subgroups (~ 1,2000), soil series (~ 15,000)

  24. Soils • Soils of the World

  25. Soils • Soils in the United States

  26. Soils • Soil Erosion

  27. Soils • Desertification U.S.-Mexican border

  28. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • RS alone is not sufficient to identify all crucial facts about soils (e.g., to map soil taxa) • In situ collection of soils data is indispensable • RS of soils can only be performed under certain conditions • Problems: e.g., obliteration of soils by dense vegetation • However: • RS can aid in the soil mapping process • RS can provide information about a number of specific soil surface characteristics and their changes

  29. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Total upwelling radiance from exposed soil recorded by a sensor, Lt, is a function of: • Atmospheric scattering (Lp) • Specular boundary layer reflectance: reflected or scattered radiance from the soil surface (~ ½ wavelength deep) (Ls) • Volumetric scattering: radiance from subsequent soil/rock substrate (Lv)

  30. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Spectral reflectance indirectly depends on characteristics of soil profile: Very long active microwaves may penetrate farther into the soil (Lv) as hasbeen demonstrated in the Sahara

  31. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Spectral reflectance characteristics of soils are: • typically reported as combined surface (Ls) and subsurface (Lv) radiance • Atmospheric attenuation (Lp) can be removed • Individual contribution of Ls and Lv difficult to disentangle • a function of: • Soil texture • Soil moisture content • Organic matter content • Iron oxide content, salinity content, etc. • Surface roughness

  32. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • In situ spectroradiometer reflectance curves of soils that contain (a) no moisture and (b) very little organic matter • Increasing reflectance with increasing wavelength • Especially in the visible, near- and mid-infrared portions of the EM spectrum

  33. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Soil Texture and Moisture Content • Soil particles may: • Reflect incident radiant flux (specular reflectance) • Absorb, transmit, and/or scatter incident radiant flux —internal scattering (volume reflectance) • Total reflectance per wavelength for soils without moisture, organic matter, and iron oxides = Function of: • Soil specular reflectance • Soil volume reflectance

  34. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Soil Texture and Moisture Content • Both influence reflectance • Fine-textured soils have a greater soil moisture retention capacity than coarse-textured soils • The greater the soil moisture content, • the smaller the amount of reflectance • the greater the amount of absorption

  35. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Soil Texture and Moisture Content • Absorption increases as soil moisture content increases, especially in the water absorption bands at: • 1.4, 1.9, and 2.7 mm • Water absorption more extreme in fine-textured soils • Moist soils appear darker in RS imagery

  36. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Soil Organic Matter • Amount has significant impact on spectral reflectance characteristics of soils • The greater the amount of organic matter in the surface soil, the greater the absorption of incident energy and the lower the spectral reflectance

  37. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Biological Soil Crusts • Communities of mosses, lichens, liverworts, algae, fungi, cyanobacteria, bacteria (primarily in deserts) • Survive dessication and high temperatures, pH, and salinity • Crucial for soil stability, fertility, erosion control, fermentation, etc. • Biological soil crust index (BSCI) for TM data (Chen 2005)

  38. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Iron Oxide • Amount has significant impact on spectral reflectance characteristics of soils • Iron oxides in soils generally cause: • increased reflectance in the red portion of the EM spectrum • decreased reflectance in the blue and green portions of the EMS • absorption in the 0.85 to 0.90 mm region

  39. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Soil Salinity • Major environmental hazard, especially in arid and irrigated areas • Increasing surface soil salt concentrations generally cause increased reflectance, especially in the visible and NIR

  40. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Soil Salinity • Reflectance increases with increasing soil salt concentration

  41. Remote Sensing of Soils Properties • Surface Roughness • The smaller the surface roughness relative to the size of the incident radiation, the greater the specular reflectance • In the absence of organic matter, moisture, and iron oxides, fine-textured soils would have higher spectral response throughout visible and near-infrared regions due to near-specular reflection • In the presence of organic matter, moisture, and iron oxides, coarse-textured soils have a relatively higher spectral response in the visible and near-infrared regions due to effective diffusive scattering of incident wavelengths • Relationships above may cause interpretation problems

  42. Rocks & Minerals • Minerals • must be found in nature • must be made up totally of inorganic substances • must have the same chemical composition wherever found • must contain atoms arranged in a regular pattern and forming solid units called crystals • Rock • Solid material composed of aggregated mineral particles • Found at or near Earth’s surface • Outcrop – surface exposure of bedrock • Bedrock – rock buried by a layer of soil and/or regolith

  43. Rocks & Minerals • Three Major Rock Classes • Igneous • Intrusive • Extrusive • Sedimentary • Clastic • Chemically precipitated • Organic • Metamorphic • Various parent rocks

  44. Rocks & Minerals • Igneous Rocks – Some Examples Rhyolite - extrusive Granite - intrusive

  45. Rocks & Minerals • Sedimentary Rocks – Some Examples Gypsum – Chem. prec. Coal – Organic Silstone – Clastic

  46. Rocks & Minerals • Metamorphic Rocks – Some Examples Gneiss (from granite) Marble (from limestone)

  47. Remote Sensing of Rocks & Minerals • RS allows for differentiation between rock types and identification of various rock characteristics • Model of reflectance for exposed rock consisting of a single or several minerals: • rl = reflectance at wavelength l • mo = cosine of the angle of incident light onto the rock or mineral of interest • m = cosine of the angle of emitted light • g = phase angle • w’ = average single scattering albedo from the rock or mineral of interest • Bg = backscatter function • Pg = average single particle phase function • H = function for isotropic scatterers

  48. Remote Sensing of Rocks & Minerals • Knowing advanced reflectance theory and optical constants of the minerals involved, theoretical reflectance spectra an be computed for: • pure minerals that have a single grain size • a pure mineral with a variety of grain sizes • mineral mixtures with varying grain sizes • Key for imaging spectroscopy: • Reflectance curves of specific types of minerals or rocks can be predicted!

  49. Imaging Spectroscopy of Rocks/Minerals • Energy Matter Interactions: Reflection & Absorption • Photons of light incident on a mineral or rock may be: • reflected from grain surfaces onto other grain surfaces • passed through the grain onto other grains • absorbed within a grain • (emitted from a grain) • Minerals absorb or scatter incident energy in (a) different ways and (b) at different wavelengths • High-spectral-resolution data can provide info about mineral chemistry

  50. Imaging Spectroscopy of Rocks/Minerals • Energy Matter Interactions: Reflection & Absorption • Alunite spectra provided by three different sensors

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