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Journal of the Australian Society of Exploration Geophysicists
RESEARCH ARTICLE

New methods for interpretation of magnetic vector and gradient tensor data II: application to the Mount Leyshon anomaly, Queensland, Australia

David A. Clark
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering, and CSIRO Earth Science and Resource Engineering, PO Box 218, Lindfield, NSW 2070, Australia. Email: David.Clark@csiro.au

Exploration Geophysics 44(2) 114-127 https://doi.org/10.1071/EG12066
Submitted: 28 October 2012  Accepted: 6 March 2013   Published: 2 April 2013

Abstract

Acquisition of magnetic gradient tensor data is anticipated to become routine in the near future. In the meantime, modern ultrahigh resolution conventional magnetic data can be used, with certain important caveats, to calculate magnetic vector components and gradient tensor elements from total magnetic intensity (TMI) or TMI gradient surveys. An accompanying paper presented new methods for inverting gradient tensor data to obtain source parameters for several elementary, but useful, models. These include point dipole (sphere), vertical line of dipoles (narrow vertical pipe), line of dipoles (horizontal cylinder), thin dipping sheet, and contact models. A key simplification is the use of eigenvalues and associated eigenvectors of the tensor. The normalised source strength (NSS), calculated from the eigenvalues, is a particularly useful rotational invariant that peaks directly over 3D compact sources, 2D compact sources, thin sheets, and contacts, independent of magnetisation direction. Source locations can be inverted directly from the NSS and its vector gradient.

Some of these new methods have been applied to analysis of the magnetic signature of the Early Permian Mount Leyshon gold-mineralised system, Queensland. The Mount Leyshon magnetic anomaly is a prominent TMI low that is produced by rock units with strong reversed remanence acquired during the Late Palaeozoic Reverse Superchron. The inferred magnetic moment for the source zone of the Mount Leyshon magnetic anomaly is ~1010 Am2. Its direction is consistent with petrophysical measurements. Given estimated magnetisation from samples and geological information, this suggests a volume of ~1.5 km × 1.5 km × 2 km (vertical). The inferred depth of the centre of magnetisation is ~900 m below surface, suggesting that the depth extent of the magnetic zone is ~1800 m. Some of the deeper, undrilled portion of the magnetic zone could be a mafic intrusion similar to the nearby coeval Fenian Diorite, representing part of the parent magma chamber beneath the Mount Leyshon Intrusive Complex.

Key words: dipole localisation, eigenvalues, eigenvectors, magnetic field vector, magnetic gradient tensor, magnetic moments, Mount Leyshon, normalised source strength.


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