Gravity and Magnetic Exploration

Gravity and Magnetic Exploration

Author: William J. Hinze

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2013-03-14

Total Pages: 527

ISBN-13: 0521871018

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This combination of textbook and reference manual provides a comprehensive account of gravity and magnetic methods for exploring the subsurface using surface, marine, airborne and satellite measurements. It describes key current topics and techniques, physical properties of rocks and other Earth materials, and digital data analysis methods used to process and interpret anomalies for subsurface information. Each chapter starts with an overview and concludes by listing key concepts to consolidate new learning. An accompanying website presents problem sets and interactive computer-based exercises, providing hands-on experience of processing, modeling and interpreting data. A comprehensive online suite of full-color case histories illustrates the practical utility of modern gravity and magnetic surveys. This is an ideal text for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses and reference text for research academics and professional geophysicists. It is a valuable resource for all those interested in petroleum, engineering, mineral, environmental, geological and archeological exploration of the lithosphere.


Fundamentals of Gravity Exploration

Fundamentals of Gravity Exploration

Author: Thomas R. LaFehr

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13: 9781560803058

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Providing information about the principles, understanding, and applicability of the gravity exploration method, this text is both a textbook and a reference for anyone engaged in geophysical exploration.


Fundamentals of Geophysical Interpretation

Fundamentals of Geophysical Interpretation

Author: Laurence R. Lines

Publisher: SEG Books

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 1560801255

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Includes discussions of fundamental concepts, explained using heuristic descriptions of seismic modelling, deconvolution, depth migration, and tomography; processing and contouring pitfalls; and developments in time-lapse seismology, borehole geophysics, multicomponent seismology, and integrated reservoir characterization.


Potential Theory in Gravity and Magnetic Applications

Potential Theory in Gravity and Magnetic Applications

Author: Richard J. Blakely

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1996-09-13

Total Pages: 468

ISBN-13: 9780521575478

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This text bridges the gap between the classic texts on potential theory and modern books on applied geophysics. It opens with an introduction to potential theory, emphasising those aspects particularly important to earth scientists, such as Laplace's equation, Newtonian potential, magnetic and electrostatic fields, and conduction of heat. The theory is then applied to the interpretation of gravity and magnetic anomalies, drawing on examples from modern geophysical literature. Topics explored include regional and global fields, forward modeling, inverse methods, depth-to-source estimation, ideal bodies, analytical continuation, and spectral analysis. The book includes numerous exercises and a variety of computer subroutines written in FORTRAN. Graduate students and researchers in geophysics will find this book essential.


Fundamentals of Geophysics

Fundamentals of Geophysics

Author: William Lowrie

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2007-09-20

Total Pages: 11

ISBN-13: 1139465953

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This second edition of Fundamentals of Geophysics has been completely revised and updated, and is the ideal geophysics textbook for undergraduate students of geoscience with an introductory level of knowledge in physics and mathematics. It gives a comprehensive treatment of the fundamental principles of each major branch of geophysics, and presents geophysics within the wider context of plate tectonics, geodynamics and planetary science. Basic principles are explained with the aid of numerous figures and step-by-step mathematical treatments, and important geophysical results are illustrated with examples from the scientific literature. Text-boxes are used for auxiliary explanations and to handle topics of interest for more advanced students. This new edition also includes review questions at the end of each chapter to help assess the reader's understanding of the topics covered and quantitative exercises for more thorough evaluation. Solutions to the exercises and electronic copies of the figures are available at www.cambridge.org/9780521859028.


Geophysics for the Mineral Exploration Geoscientist

Geophysics for the Mineral Exploration Geoscientist

Author: Michael Dentith

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2014-04-24

Total Pages: 1083

ISBN-13: 1139915622

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Providing a balance between principles and practice, this state-of-the-art overview of geophysical methods takes readers from the basic physical phenomena, through the acquisition and processing of data, to the creation of geological models of the subsurface and data interpretation to find hidden mineral deposits. Detailed descriptions of all the commonly used geophysical methods are given, including gravity, magnetic, radiometric, electrical, electromagnetic and seismic methods. Each technique is described in a consistent way and without complex mathematics. Emphasising extraction of maximum geological information from geophysical data, the book also explains petrophysics, data modelling and common interpretation pitfalls. Packed with full-colour figures, also available online, the text is supported by selected examples from around the world, including all the major deposit types. Designed for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in minerals geoscience, this is also a valuable reference for professionals in the mining industry wishing to make greater use of geophysical methods. In 2015, Dentith and Mudge won the ASEG Lindsay Ingall Memorial Award for their combined effort in promoting geophysics to the wider community with the publication of this title.


Acquisition and Analysis of Terrestrial Gravity Data

Acquisition and Analysis of Terrestrial Gravity Data

Author: Leland Timothy Long

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2013-01-17

Total Pages: 183

ISBN-13: 1107024137

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A one-stop manual for graduate students and professionals, combining introductory gravity survey procedures with full explanations of analysis techniques.


The Hunt for Earth Gravity

The Hunt for Earth Gravity

Author: John Milsom

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2018-06-23

Total Pages: 416

ISBN-13: 3319749595

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The author of this history of mankind’s increasingly successful attempts to understand, to measure and to map the Earth’s gravity field (commonly known as ‘little g’ or just ‘g’) has been following in the footsteps of the pioneers, intermittently and with a variety of objectives, for more than fifty years. It is a story that begins with Galileo’s early experiments with pendulums and falling bodies, progresses through the conflicts between Hooke and Newton and culminates in the measurements that are now being made from aircraft and satellites. The spectacular increases in accuracy that have been achieved during this period provide the context, but the main focus is on the people, many of whom were notable eccentrics. Also covered are the reasons WHY these people thought their measurements would be useful, with emphasis in the later chapters on the place of ‘g’ in today’s applied geology, and on the ways in which it is providing new and spectacular visions of our planet. It is also, in part, a personal memoir that explores the parallels between the way fieldwork is being done now and the difficulties that accompanied its execution in the past. Selected topics in the mathematics of ‘g’ are discussed in a series of short Codas.