4.7 Article

Mapping Mining Areas in the Brazilian Amazon Using MSI/Sentinel-2 Imagery (2017)

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs10081178

Keywords

small-scale mining; industrial mining; google engine; image classification; land-use cover change

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES, Brazil)
  2. Instituto Tecnologico da Vale (ITV, Brazil), Project 'Uso Sustentavel de Recursos Naturais em Regioes Tropicais' [15024016001P1]
  3. CNPq (Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development) [135114/2017-9]

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Although mining plays an important role for the economy of the Amazon, little is known about its attributes such as area, type, scale, and current status as well as socio/environmental impacts. Therefore, we first propose a low time-consuming and high detection accuracy method for mapping the current mining areas within 13 regions of the Brazilian Amazon using Sentinel-2 images. Then, integrating the maps in a GIS (Geography Information System) environment, mining attributes for each region were further assessed with the aid of the DNPM (National Department for Mineral Production) database. Detection of the mining area was conducted in five main steps. (a) MSI (MultiSpectral Instrument)/Sentinel-2A (S2A) image selection; (b) definition of land-use classes and training samples; (c) supervised classification; (d) vector editing for quality control; and (e) validation with high-resolution RapidEye images (Kappa = 0.70). Mining areas derived from validated S2A classification totals 1084.7 km(2) in the regions analyzed. Small-scale mining comprises up to 64% of total mining area detected comprises mostly gold (617.8 km(2)), followed by tin mining (73.0 km(2)). The remaining 36% is comprised by industrial mining such as iron (47.8), copper (55.5) and manganese (8.9 km(2)) in Carajas, bauxite in Trombetas (78.4) and Rio Capim (48.5 km(2)). Given recent events of mining impacts, the large extension of mining areas detected raises a concern regarding its socio-environmental impacts for the Amazonian ecosystems and for local communities.

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