Geoscience Australia & AIG Short Course – Airborne electromagnetic workshop: A practical guide

Australian Institute of Geoscientists > Events > additionalinfo > Geoscience Australia & AIG Short Course – Airborne electromagnetic workshop: A practical guide

Geoscience Australia & AIG Short Course – Airborne electromagnetic workshop: A practical guide


 

 


Date & Time

August 11, 2022 (Thursday)
 


Venue

The University Club of Western Australia
Hackett Entrance #1, Hackett Drive Crawley  WA  6009
 



 


Airborne electromagnetic workshop: A practical guide

Geoscience Australia has been heavily involved in developing airborne electromagnetics (AEM) as a geophysical method, from its origins as a qualitative “bump finding” survey technique to a quantitative tool for subsurface modelling. This advancement had led to rapid expansion of Australia’s AEM coverage over the last half a decade through Geoscience Australia’s Exploring for the Future program and collaborations with state and territory geological surveys. The team at Geoscience Australia is experienced across all aspects of AEM programs including survey planning, managing data acquisition, data QA/QC, processing and inversion, and geological interpretation. In this one-day workshop we aim to pass on our experience by demonstrating AEM theory and practice.

The workshop will be divided into three sessions covering data acquisition, AEM inversion, and interpretation. In the first workshop session, we will introduce the theoretical principles of airborne electromagnetic surveys, walk through the process of planning data acquisition and demonstrate our best practices for QA/QC in the context of Geoscience Australia AEM technical deed, which assures AEM data are acquired to a high standard.

In the second session, we will explore the inversion of AEM data to generate bulk conductivity models. This session will include a tutorial on the range of inversion codes developed in-house, including deterministic Occam inversions that produce a smooth model with a good data fit, as well as advanced Monte Carlo algorithms that sample hundreds of thousands of models with good data fit and allow rigorous specification of prior knowledge of subsurface conductivity.

In the final session, we will explore how we interpret subsurface features from AEM conductivity models at Geoscience Australia. The focus of this session will be on avoiding some of the common pitfalls in AEM interpretation by understanding the considerable uncertainty and ambiguity involved. By facilitating this workshop and providing practical examples for participants to work through, we aim to build an AEM community within Australia that can make the best use of these valuable, and relatively easy to acquire data.

Participants will need to bring their own laptop to the workshop to participate in the practicals through cloud hosted exercises.

 


Program

Time Activity  Topic Presenter
8:30 – 8:45 Arrival Registration, tea, and coffee  
8:45 – 9:00 Welcome  Introduction Karol Czarnota
9:00 – 9:15 Talk Geological Survey of Western Australia reflections on AEM TBA
9:15 – 10:00 Lecture 1 Theory, data acquisition and 1st pass data QA/QC Yusen Ley Cooper 
10:00 – 10:45 Practical 1 Planning acquisition and 1st pass data QA/QC Yusen Ley Cooper 
10:45 – 11:15 Morning Tea    
11:15 – 12:30 Lecture 2 AEM Inversion Anand Ray
12:30 – 13:15 Lunch     
13:15 – 14:45 Practical 2  AEM Inversion Anand Ray 
14:45 – 15:15 Afternoon Tea    
15:15 – 16:15 Lecture 3 AEM Interpretation Neil Symington  and Sebastian Wong
16:15 – 17:00 Practical 3 AEM Interpretation Neil Symington  and Sebastian Wong

This event is FREE but is limited to 40 participants only. Morning tea, light lunch and afternoon tea will be served.

 


Bookings

This event is now fully booked. For questions or enquiries, please contact aigwa@aig.org.au.

Bookings

This event is fully booked.