Determining physical and mechanical volcanic rock properties via reflectance spectroscopy

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Authors

External Organisational units

  • University of Canterbury
  • Massey University Manawatu

Abstract

There are currently no reliable methods to determine rock physical and mechanical properties that are not labor or resource intensive, especially at the scale of volcanoes. Using mineralogical-physical-mechanical relationships, we suggest it is possible to derive rock properties from rapid, non-invasive reflectance spectroscopy measurements. To demonstrate this potential, we correlate the physical and mechanical properties of variously altered andesitic volcanic rocks to laboratory reflectance spectroscopy using statistical analysis. Several rock properties, including density, connected porosity, strength, magnetic susceptibility, and elasticity, correlate with reflectance spectroscopy in both the visible and short-wave infrared parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. We attribute these correlations to the presence and degradation (i.e. weathering or hydrothermal alteration) of iron-bearing minerals such as pyroxene, magnetite, and pyrite, which reflect changes to both rock properties and reflectance spectroscopy measurements. Results support the use of transfer functions to estimate rock properties directly from reflectance spectroscopy. Ultimately, aerial or satellite imaging spectroscopy could be used to create geotechnical maps at volcano scale.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number107393
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of volcanology and geothermal research
Volume420.2021
Issue numberDecember
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 9 Nov 2021