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A First Look at Airborne Imaging Spectrometer (AIS) Data in an Area of Altered Volcanic Rocks and Carbonate Formations, Hot Creek Range, South Central NevadaThree flight lines of Airborne Imaging Spectrometer (AIS) data were collected in 128 bands between 1.2 and 2.4 microns in the Hot Creek Range, Nevada on July 25, 1984. The flight lines are underlain by hydrothermally altered and unaltered Paleozoic carbonates and Tertiary rhyolitic to latitic volcanics in the Tybo mining district. The original project objectives were to discriminate carbonate rocks from other rock types, to distinguish limestone from dolomite, and to discriminate carbonate units from each other using AIS imagery. Because of high cloud cover over the prime carbonate flight line and because of the acquisition of another flight line in altered and unaltered volcanics, the study has been extended to the discrimination of alteration products. In an area of altered and unaltered rhyolites and latites in Red Rock Canyon, altered and unaltered rock could be discriminated from each other using spectral features in the 1.16 to 2.34 micron range. The altered spectral signatures resembled montmorillonite and kaolinite. Field samples were gathered and the presence of montmorillonite was confirmed by X-ray analysis.
Document ID
19860002158
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Feldman, S. C.
(Nevada Univ. Reno, NV, United States)
Taranik, J. V.
(Nevada Univ. Reno, NV, United States)
Mouat, D. A.
(Stanford Univ. United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
June 15, 1985
Publication Information
Publication: JPL Proc. of the Airborne Imaging Spectrometer Data Anal. Workshop
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Accession Number
86N11625
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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