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Modern geochemistry utilizes three powerful tools: (major and trace) elements, isotopes, and equations, to study various Earth and environmental processes. A combination of the experimental tools (elements and isotopes) with theoretical tools (equations) provides penetrating insights into the Earth and environmental processes. The aim of this book is to link equations more closely with geochemical measurements, including elemental abundances and (radiogenic, radioactive and stable) isotopic compositions. The importance to use equations in scientific research has been best stated by Albert Einstein, "Equations are more important to me, because politics is for the present, but an equation is something for eternity." <...>
The fourth edition of the European Conference on Geostatistics for Environmental Applications (geoENV IV) took place in Barcelona, November 27-29, 2002. As a proof that there is an increasing interest in environmental issues in the geostatistical community, the conference attracted over 100 participants, mostly Europeans (up to 10 European countries were represented), but also from other countries in the world. Only 46 contributions, selected out of around 100 submitted papers, were invited to be presented orally during the conference. Additionally 30 authors were invited to present their work in poster format during a special session.
Geostatistical simulation makes strong assumptions of stationarity in the mean and the variance over the domain of interest. Unfortunately, geological nature usually does not reflect this assumption and we are forced to subdivide our model area into stationary regions that have some common geological controls and similar statistical properties. This paper addresses the significant complexity introduced by boundaries. Boundaries are often soft, that is, samples near boundaries influence multiple rock types.
The Second European Conference on Geostatistics for Environmental Applications took place in Valencia, November 18-20, 1998. Two years have past from the first meeting in Lisbon and the geostatistical community has kept active in the environmental field. In these days of congress inflation, we feel that continuity can only be achieved by ensuring quality in the papers. For this reason, all papers in the book have been reviewed by, at least, two referees, and care has been taken to ensure that the reviewer comments have been incorporated in the final version of the manuscript. We are thankful to the members of the scientific committee for their timely review of the scripts. All in all, there are three keynote papers from experts in soil science, climatology and ecology and 43 contributed papers providing a good indication of the status of geostatistics as applied in the environmental field all over the world. We feel now confident that the geoENV conference series, seeded around a coffee table almost six years ago, will march firmly into the next century. <...>
Proceedings of the seventh European conference on geostatistics for environmental applications / Материалы Седьмой Европейской конференции по геостатистике для применения в окружающей среде
Characterising spatial and temporal variation in environmental properties, generatingmaps from sparse samples, and quantifying uncertainties in the maps, are key concerns across the environmental sciences. The body of tools known as geostatistics offers a powerful means of addressing these and related questions. This volume presents recent research in methodological developments in geostatistics and in a variety of specific environmental application areas including soil science, climatology, pollution, health, wildlife mapping, fisheries and remote sensing, amongst others.
Ordinary kriging and non-linear geostatistical estimators are now well accepted methods in mining grade control and mine resource estimation. Kriging is also a necessary step in the most commonly used methods of conditional simulation used in the mining industry. In both kriging and conditional simulation, the search volume or ‘kriging neighbourhood’ is defined by the user. The definition of this search can have a very significant impact on the outcome of the kriging estimate or the quality of the conditioning of a simulation.
Nickel, copper, and cobalt resources in undiscovered Ni-Cu deposits associated with Palaeoproterozoic synorogenic intrusions and Archaean and Palaeoproterozoic komatiitic volcanic rocks have been estimated down to the depth of one kilometre in the bedrock of Finland using the three-part quantitative assessment method. Grade-tonnage models were constructed for Finnish synorogenic intrusive deposits and komatiitic deposits using data from known Fennoscandian deposits. Twenty-six permissive tracts were delineated for synorogenic intrusive deposits, 30 for komatiitic deposits, and 15 for Talvivaaratype Ni-Zn-Cu-Co deposits.
Every day, somewhere in the world, decisions are made about how public lands that might contain undiscovered resources should be used or whether to invest in exploration for minerals. Less frequently, decisions are made concerning mineral resource adequacy, national policy, and regional development. Naturally, the people making the decisions would like to know the exact consequences of the decisions before the decisions are made. Unfortunately, it is not possible to inform these decision-makers, with any certainty, about amounts, discoverability, or economics of undiscovered mineral resources.
Plate tectonics focuses on the dynamics and kinematics of the most external layers of the solid Earth: the relatively thin oceanic crust (7–10 km thickness), the continental crust (5–70 km thickness), the mantle lithosphere, whose lower boundary can be found at depths ranging between 80 and 250 km, the underlying asthenosphere (up to 410 km depth), the transition zone (410–670 km depth), and the very huge lower mantle, which extends to a depth of 2,900 km (Fig. 1.1). All these rock layers are formed by solid-state mixtures of minerals that are chemically and structurally stable only within determined intervals of pressure and temperature. Rocks can eventually contain liquid phases in the existing pores between grains or in cracks.
Processes involved in the development of igneous and metamorphic rocks involve some combination of crystal growth, solution, movement and deformation, which is expressed as changes in texture (microstructure). Recent advances in the quantification of aspects of crystalline rock textures, such as crystal size, shape, orientation and position, have opened new avenues of research that extend and complement the more dominant chemical and isotopic studies.