4.5 Article

Mapping Potentially Acid Generating Material on Abandoned Mine Lands Using Remotely Piloted Aerial Systems

Journal

MINERALS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/min11040365

Keywords

remotely piloted aerial systems; acid mine drainage; remote sensing; multispectral; hyperspectral; jarosite; iron oxides

Funding

  1. Bureau of Land Management [L15AC00138]

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The study explores the use of Remotely Piloted Aerial Systems (RPASs) to map the spatial and temporal changes of potentially acid generating material (PAGM) across mine waste rock piles on abandoned mine lands. Supervised and unsupervised classification algorithms show benefits, with unsupervised methods requiring less user input. RPAS carrying a broadband multispectral sensor can be extensively applied to abandoned mine lands, promising to increase spatial and temporal coverage of accurate maps critical for environmental monitoring and reclamation efforts.
Weathering and transport of potentially acid generating material (PAGM) at abandoned mines can degrade downstream environments and contaminate water resources. Monitoring the thousands of abandoned mine lands (AMLs) for exposed PAGM using field surveys is time intensive. Here, we explore the use of Remotely Piloted Aerial Systems (RPASs) as a complementary remote sensing platform to map the spatial and temporal changes of PAGM across a mine waste rock pile on an AML. We focus on testing the ability of established supervised and unsupervised classification algorithms to map PAGM on imagery with very high spatial resolution, but low spectral sampling. At the Perry Canyon, NV, USA AML, we carried out six flights over a 29-month period, using a RPAS equipped with a 5-band multispectral sensor measuring in the visible to near infrared (400-1000 nm). We built six different 3 cm resolution orthorectified reflectance maps, and our tests using supervised and unsupervised classifications revealed benefits to each approach. Supervised classification schemes allowed accurate mapping of classes that lacked published spectral libraries, such as acid mine drainage (AMD) and efflorescent mineral salts (EMS). The unsupervised method produced similar maps of PAGM, as compared to supervised schemes, but with little user input. Our classified multi-temporal maps, validated with multiple field and lab-based methods, revealed persistent and slowly growing 'hotspots' of jarosite on the mine waste rock pile, whereas EMS exhibit more rapid fluctuations in extent. The mapping methods we detail for a RPAS carrying a broadband multispectral sensor can be applied extensively to AMLs. Our methods show promise to increase the spatial and temporal coverage of accurate maps critical for environmental monitoring and reclamation efforts over AMLs.

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