R. J. P. Lyon. The Effects of Weathering and Other Varnish-like Coatings on High Spectral Resolution Airborne Imagery (Part two)[J]. Journal of Remote Sensing, 1996, (3). DOI: 10.11834/jrs.1996022.
The Effects of Weathering and Other Varnish-like Coatings on High Spectral Resolution Airborne Imagery (Part two)
Surface weathering preduees coatings of mineral materials which may be similar to
or quite differeflt from
the minerals of the underlying parent rock. These coating are usually only microns to millimeters in thickness
but they completely control the reflectance spectra of the terrain. In a similar way coatings formed from adherence of wind-borne dusts
cemented or not
will also dominate the reflectance spectra as seen in remotely sensed imagery. Cemented coatings are often dark-colored (even black) and are usually termed "desert vanish" from their common occurrence in arid regions. Despite their featureless
dark color to our eyes
these coatings (often clays)
show characteristic reflectance minima in the short-wave infrared (SWIR) regions
by which their mineralogical composition can be deduced. Thus to relate remotely sensed imagery to actual ground "geology" reqinres a good knowledge of the surficial character of the exposed rock outcrops. It is not always possible to find "fresh" surfaces in the field
and one must always differentiate "upper-surface" spectre (and also "lower-surface" spectra) from the spectra of the "inner rock" materials. This paper describs the spectral effects in deeply-weatherad Mafic
Ultrabasic
and Felsic Rocks in arid terrains of the central Western Australia.